One of the issues with visiting the local library is that many of the books will have been based on film photography. While many of the concepts are the same, there are many things that are different.
In terms of artistic questions (framing, what to shoot, when to press the shutter, etc.) the concepts work equally well whether you are shooting digital or film. Modern technology can offer additional options, but the concepts are the same. For instance, if you are shooting sports, a book based on film photography might spend a lot of time on teaching you tricks to anticipate the exact moment to take the shot. You need to take into account shutter lag, and the fact that it may take a few seconds to advance the film and get a second shot. Many modern cameras can take five (or more) frames per second. It may not be important to spend time learning how to get the shot with only a single capture. Similarly, some books ill spend time on techniques to prefocus the lens, so you can get the shot just as the athlete hits a pre-determined spot. Many modern cameras have sophisticated auto-focus systems that can track a moving target, eliminating the need to pre-focus.
In terms of aperture affecting depth of field, shutter speed affecting motion blur, that's equally true for both film and digital. However a book built around 35mm film SLR cameras, may not mention that the values suggested in the book are only typical for that frame size.
But the real issue is exposure strategies. If your goal is maximizing image quality, than the strategies used for film are not the same that you should use for digital.
Consider a high key shot, with nothing darker than a mid tone (perhaps a polar bear in a snow storm). With a film camera, you will get a good result trusting the camera's metering system. This will give you an exposure where the narrow range of tones in your scene end up hitting the sweet spot in the middle of the negatives "S" shaped response curve. If you were shooting digital, you might want to use some positive exposure compensation in order to get that narrow range of tones as high as you can without blowing the important highlights.
The above is also true for a low key photo (perhaps a black dog on a pile of coal). With film, you trust the camera's metering, and with digital you would use positive exposure compensation.
Now if you were using an incident light meter, the strategies differ. With a high key shot and film, you would want a lower exposure than what the meter suggests. With a digital camera, the suggested exposure may be good.
With a low key shot and an incident light meter, you would want a higher exposure with film, and an even higher exposure for digital.
With film, the concern is generally the exposure of the midtones of the image. With digital the concern is usually with the exposure of the highlights.
Another issue is that books with a film heritage generally assume an "exposure centric workflow." You start by selecting the film speed you think is best for the scene, and everything revolves around hitting that exposure. If you want to stop down for more depth of field, they tell you that you must compensate by changing your shutter speed. With digital, that's not necessary, Digital has no requirement that you use the same exposure for every shot on the roll/memory card.
With digital, a good workflow is to select the largest aperture that yields sufficient depth of field, and the slowest shutter that doesn't yield unwanted motion blur. You then set the camera to Auto-ISO so you get a reasonable looking image from that exposure. That's a workflow that just isn't practical with film, and often isn't mentioned in any book that's based in film photography.