The other day I was being Aunt-sat. The oldest nephew had basketball practice for the Special Olympics in the later morning so we were taking it easy. He and I were just shooting the breeze, playing games on our phones/game players and relaxing after a light lunch. But, to be honest, I was getting a bit tired of hearing “the pew” of the game (to be nice to the rest of us in the house, he played it low, but still). Of course, I adored the excitement he was having with “winning” (in his mind, his special needs means anytime something good happens, it’s a win). So I said, let’s shake things up, have a little fun together and put together this Lego book/toy set I had for him. It was the Lego Jurassic World Build Your Own Adventure: With Minifigure and Exclusive Model [With Legos] and the contributors that were assigned are Julia March and Selina Wood.

As I said, it was a Jurassic Park set from one of the more recent movies. You have a “box” that holds the Legos (afterwards get tape to put items back into it, or a ziplocked bag will probably be better, mostly because we had a few replacement parts left over) and a book that gives a little bit of a story (a baby dino has escaped and you’re trying to find it, with the odd clue here and there as well as meeting the characters in one or several of the movies). There is a tiny and (according to my nephew) cutecutetinycute dinosaur called Blue as well, but the main thing is showing you if you get other sets how you could put them together for playing. Plus, there are a few tips that might have helped us put together the toy (but our way killed more time) with the instructions in the back were decent. However, there is no text to them, just illustrations of the pieces you need. There are a few other extras included as well.
The book is okay storywise, as it is nothing fancy or really special. It is the extras (the tips, instructions, etc) that work best (or at least for me working with my nephew). The ages on the book says it is for ages 6 and up, but I think a slightly younger kid would be okay with the book itself, but it is those g-d tiny pieces of Legos! They are slippery and totally Lego 101: So, again, tiny, slippery and typical edges. But when you are done, you have a helicopter that the Chris Pratt character uses in the movie. The pieces also included a man figure, Blue, and working parts (I am not sure who had more fun spinning the propeller, the kid or his aunt!) 
If you have kid who can put together 60 piece Lego sets by themselves it works well, still the nephew and I had fun doing it together: him putting the pieces on, him correcting my incorrect hand-off of a piece or two, the grandfather/my dad being helpful with an “welding issue” (a piece got stuck and the “kids” needed an adults help) and the results were proudly shown to the mother/my sister by the nephew who proclaimed, “I did all by myself.”