While P&H, as suggested by mdb, is a good introductory text, used often in undergraduate computer organization/architecture courses, you'll find that their other book, Computer Architecture: A Quantitative Approach (now in it's 4th edition) is more popular as a comprehensive text, encompassing perhaps 2 or 3 courses worth of material (used more often in a graduate context). This book, with the authors in reverse order, is known as H&P.

As for assembly language, H&P (and P&H) cover MIPS assembly in some detail. They also explain the basic organization of a microprocessor, what basic operations exist on nearly any architecture, how they work, and why
they exist. This may be what you need, considering that your course will likely focus on a MIPS variant or something MIPS-like as its practical example. However, if you want a resource on the instruction set and common assembly language idioms and practices for a particular architecture, or optimization guides for a particular microarchitecture, manuals provided by the manufacturer or online resources are by far the most useful. Instruction set information can be found for virtually all architectures out of necessity, and third-party optimization guides like these can be found for most popular platforms.