Yeah, I've used that. It's pretty good. I would hardly describe it as a reading list book though. There's no theory in there, just photocopiable activities. For pronunciation theory, get Sound Foundations by Adrian Underhill. Pronunciation Games is the sort of book you would just hope that your school would have in their resource library, rather than something to have on your own bookshelf (unless you work freelance). In Vietnam, it's legal to photocopy books, so we have loads of copies of pretty much everything if you need me to look anything else up for you.
Another book that works quite well in combination with Pronunciation Games is Ship or Sheep (or the elementary version Tree or Three). That's more of a proper course in pron though, so you use Ship or Sheep for the language, and Pron Games for the activities. The activities in Pronunciation Games are pretty good, because they're very easy to modify for whatever language point you're doing, as long as you have a photocopier and a bit of correction fluid.