An eight-year-old reviewer had some fun with the Light & Illusion Action Pack (Darling Kindersley, £12.99, ISBN 0 7513 5268 3), but needed help from his teenage sister. Experiments with the diffraction grating, spinning patterned wheels and optical illusions were their favourites. The dozen push-out card projects are simple and come with a brightly illustrated booklet, though the box fails to say that you’ll have to rummage about for string, sticky tape, tracing paper, glue and a torch. And what would Newton have thought of a “light action pack” without a prism or a mirror?
More from New ¾«¶«´«Ã½
Explore the latest news, articles and features

Space
Mercury may have gained all of its unexpected water in a single day
News

Health
Experimental mRNA vaccine may protect against multiple Ebola viruses
News

Mind
Political anger affects the body differently to other forms of anger
News

Health
Australia is battling its largest diphtheria outbreak in living memory
News
Popular articles
Trending New ¾«¶«´«Ã½ articles
1
The Selfish Gene at 50: Why Dawkins’s evolution classic still holds up
2
Photos reveal unexpected details from the world's first atomic test
3
Mathematicians stunned by AI's biggest breakthrough in mathematics yet
4
Women’s better memories may delay Alzheimer’s diagnosis by years
5
How I used psychology to come back from the worst year of my life
6
The ‘doomsday’ glacier’s giant ice shelf is about to break away
7
Why autism pioneer Uta Frith wants to dismantle the spectrum
8
A lost ancient script reveals how writing as we know it really began
9
Putting CO2 into rocks and getting hydrogen out is climate double win
10
300-year-old experiment could become world's best dark matter detector