"Catton is exceptional at allowing one to view the details through his extensive research and exploration of the history of the making of Mount Rainer National Park.... If you believe (like I generally did) that the initiation and development of a national park... is a relatively simple affair designed around the natural value of the land, then you will find this book an eye-opener."-Natural Areas Journal
"National Park, City Playground is clearly written, free of jargon, and accessible by professional and nonprofessional readers. It would be useful in classrooms . . . . [and] it offers urban planners a case study in the significance of natural landmarks in city projects and as a marker of local identity. It also provides urban historians with an approach to understand the matrix of competing interests. Overall, Catton provides a useful contribution to our understanding of the National Park Service." - H-Net
"Drawing on a wide-ranging and comprehensive collection of primary and secondary sources, Catton has given full treatment to the political wrangling, legislation, and policies that resulted in the ever-changing functions of Mount Rainier National Park. . . . The book is certainly one of the most informative and enjoyable books on the topic." - Pacific Northwest Quarterly
"Theodore Catton's deft new book charts how the creation of Mount Rainier National Park was inseparable from the citizens of the two cities that laid claim to the mountain and made it their own. . . . The result is a model of shrewd scholarship that future parks historians might emulate. . . .His book reminds us that the looming heights of 'the Mountain,' as Seattleites and Tacomans call the peak, speak to a complex history that environmentalists and historians would both do well to remember." - Western Historical Quarterly
"The author does an excellent job of contextualizing Mount Rainier within the larger history of the national park system and the political economic history of the United States, and he carefully follows the thread of local influence on park development. Perhaps most usefully, Catton provides a means by which readers can understand the park in its current form." - Oregon Historical Quarterly
"Catton delivers an insightful book with a comprehensive bibliography highlighted by a host of manuscript collections. Mount Rainier aficionados will want to add the book to their collections. . . . His synthesis. . . is both edifying and thorough." - Columbia Magazine
"Catton's National Park, City Playground offers an excellent example of the disappearing boundary between public and academic history. . . . Catton is at the vanguard of the new generation of historians whose work is bridging the divide between public history and academic scholarship. I highly recommend this work as a fine example of what public history can accomplish." - Montana: The Magazine of Western History
"This is a superb book, a real gem, which should be required reading by all who enjoy Mount Rainier National Park and the Cascade Mountains of Oregon and Washington...Highly recommended." - Choice