McDuie-Ra reveals play as a world of skills, tactics, materials, social codes, traditions, information systems, foresight and forbearance. Here, insurgency is about enacting movement, which requires amenable surfaces that generate a feeling beyond capture, even as it leaves traces everywhere. Through a series of accessible concepts skateboarding is rendered a world capable of being distributed across diverse geographies, even as it cannot be inhabited by all. AbdouMaliq Simone, University of Sheffield, UK This remarkable book goes beyond the current literature by focusing on how insurgent play creates a more inclusive environment, how disruptions can act as repairs and how these contestations test the limits of urban spaces and their governance. Jeffrey Hou, PhD, FASLA, Professor and Head, Department of Architecture, National University of Singapore McDuie-Ra introduces insurgent play both theoretically and ethnographically as a constellation of temporary, unplanned, unpredictable bodily appropriations of the city. Opposing surveillance and hostile design, insurgent play brings new life to existing places: sprouting from the middle of things, it enlivens urban interstices through irregular, fragmented, joyful precious moments. Andrea Mubi Brighenti, Department of Sociology and Social Research, University of Trento, Italy