Can You Feel the Force?: Putting the Fizz Back into Physics
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Average customer review:Product Description
Physics doesn't just happen in a lab it happens in the kitchen, in your bath, in a car! Author Richard Hammond is best known for co-presenting "Top Gear" alongside Jeremy Clarkson. He is passionate about science and learning, and is the host of "Brainiac: Science Abuse" on Sky One. This title helps you join a thrilling high-energy journey through time, space and beyond and find out about the physical forces that make our world what it is. Here, find out how science affects everything, from roller-coasters to fighter pilots. The book is crammed with fascinating physics facts and interactive experiments. It has a totally cool look at physics!
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #8858 in Books
- Published on: 2006-06-29
- Original language: English
- Binding: Hardcover
- 96 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
"Top Gear presenter Richard Hammond gets all fired about science and how it affects everything around us with his new funky physics book, Can You Feel the Force?" Funday Times Online 27/06/06
About the Author
Richard Hammond is best known for co-presenting Top Gear alongside Jeremy Clarkson. He is passionate about science and learning, and is the host of Brainiac: Science Abuse on Sky One. This is his first book for children.
Customer Reviews
How to engage children with physics
Physics has a poor reputation amongst the sciences - which is a shame, as if you get to grips with physics, it opens up all sorts of areas of knowledge.
Richard Hammond, with the enthusiasm so familiar from "Top Gear" and (more relevantly, in this case) "Brainiac", brings alive a wide range of aspects of physics in this book. In the first part, he provides a brief history of the development of the science. HISTORY? In a children's book? Well, I suppose everybody is doing it these days - but kudos for introducing the history of science to youngsters.
In the following parts, he looks at forces, matter and light (i.e. radiation, in effect). The text is in paragraph chunks - so should be engaging even for children who are used to instant entertainment - and the pages are visually rich and humorous.
Lots of the book is built around the sort of questions that are the bane of the average parent's life - "How do planes stay in the air?" "Why do balloons stick to the wall?" The science that is presented is accurate, and consistent with what children are likely to be taught in school. The book even introduces some of the mysteries of relativity - wow!
To present science accurately and interestingly is a real challenge, and this book has done an excellent job.
legend
legend in the making he is he survied a crash and is now fully recovered he crashed be cause of phisicks everything is to do with phisics thats what i learned that no teacher could
Wow!
Physics at school was mainly Mr Salter droning on about Brownian motion and how to calculate momentum in 127 easy steps - hence I took little or no notice. In fear of my nephew having to endure a similar introduction to the subject, I bought him this book and he absolutely loves it, as do I! Mr Hammond should receive the Nobel Prize for this lucid and entertaining introduction. We salute you Sir!




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