I spent the last two years hearing about this book from a friend. For whatever reason, I would nod at the recommendation and then promptly forget all about it. If only I'd read it sooner! The concept that one can play anywhere, hence belong anywhere, is delightful and flies in the face of capitalism-fueled existential dread. In a quick one-hundred twenty pages, one discovers in reading Fusselman on play, space, and risk an inevitable joy. Even turning the pages of the book, I found, was a kind of game. My head is now full of ideas about how to fill the world around me with play. Savage Park, the essay itself and the park for which it's named, is a state of mind one brings to being. As Husselman writes, play is a "how," not a "what." If you enjoy playful meditations and unruly abstractions (as I very much do), this book will not disappoint!
Also, it's only discussed for a page or so, but the idea that American restaurants--or, more broadly, restaurants--were naturally infantilizing to patrons fascinated me. The "mommy-sphere," Husselman calls it. Waiters are mommies! Why don't I cook the food myself? Why don't I just get up and get another Sprite? I guess I want Mommy to do it for me. Some of these meditations, such as the condemnation of computers and tablets, read more fractious than truly concerned about their dangers. (Maybe I'm annoyed because I grew up with a mix of outdoor and "screen-based" activities; also I know family friends who tell me their children with autism can really thrive given iPads and other touch-screen devices to play. I know it isn't that deep, but that's kind of my point about the book. If play is really a state of mind, why are electronics suddenly an exception to that otherwise liberating rule?)
Expect a dearth of insight on the accessibility of space, how we restrict public spaces, how some people are more easily afforded spaces than others, etc. In that way, the point-of-view of Savage Park is limited. Husselman's friend Yelena's makeshift art station at MUJI, for example, is cute but also potentially ignorant of social convention and respectful awareness of those around you. Yelena is white, and her knack for acting "like a homeless person," as Husselman writes, is depicted as nomadic and romantic, but I applaud her confidence with hesitant admiration. Yes, everyone should be free to challenge the system of capitalism and subvert its awful expectations of us, but even a rudimentary understanding of how facets of identity factor into how different people play with space would be useful for qualifying that belief. Husselman disclaims Americans are unlikely to adopt such an attitude themselves based on societal expectations, but there are plenty, including she and her whole family, who clearly have it easy enough to say, "Screw those expectations!"
All that being said, despite some lack of social awareness on the part of the author, I think Savage Park itself is a useful read that lets everyone enjoy the fun of play. I can imagine using ideas and games from the book in a classroom setting. The teachings, fortunately, are fairly accessible and refreshingly simple.