It may be a little daunting for a first timer. I suggest you read the manual, then go on-line and look at presets people have created, then read the manual again. Take the time to get the camera's color settings, gamma, etc. setup exactly the way you want them. It will make a huge difference.
Of course, you can shoot with the camera, as it comes out of the box, but you'll get much more pleasing results if you spend a couple of hours learning and adjusting it's settings. Again, people before you have figured out some great settings for film look, etc.
The second issue with the XH-A1 that is tricky is focus. The camera auto-focuses fine, but I always use manual focus, and manual focusing is difficult at best. There are several focus assist features that you should learn about from the manual and practice using, so they become second nature. By switching the viewfinder to B&W (I set mine up to automatically switch to B&W when I hit "peaking"), turning on peaking, and hitting the magnify, you can get critical focus. You don't always need to magnify, if you can zoom in to focus (which is always a good idea, if you're not shooting live).
None of this will make much sense to you until you get the camera and begin exploring. Did I mention that you should read the manual?

Oh, and there is a neat feature that will transition the focus over a set amount of time, from one focal distance to another, which is great for a follow focus effect. Whatever you do, do not assume your shot is in focus simply by looking at the low resolution viewfinder. You will be sadly disappointed when you look at the image on a high def monitor. You must establish a manual focus discipline that you follow meticulously.
Otherwise, the camera's controls are all easy to locate and a joy to work with. After a few hours of shooting with the camera, I fell in love with it. It is now my favorite camera; especially for its 24f mode ... the video looks very nice.
Oh, one more thing, don't expect too much in low light; especially if you need to zoom in. The lens opens to f1.8, but quickly drops to f3.2 when you zoom in. One way to get a bit more light is to shoot in 24f and use a 1/48 shutter (which is recommended anyway), but f3.2 is not a fast lens in any case, so you should plan on having decent lighting. You can bump up the gain, but HDV is a bit noisy to begin with and increasing the gain just increases the noise.
Is that too much information? The bottom line is that it's a sweet camera, but you can't expect too much if you use it like a point-and-shoot. It performs much better if you spend a day or three reading, experimenting (be sure to capture each test and look at it in full resolution), and practicing.
Doug