“An important book—a masterful study that is both fascinating and entertaining about the everyday appliance that shaped, more than any other, the way we live and eat.”
— Claudia Roden, author of "The New Book of Middle Eastern Food"
"Your domestic fridge is your autobiography. By its contents are ye known. People ostentatiously arrange green vegetables to signal virtue. I know I do. The ratio of yogurt to beer is always revealing. That withered and wretched celeriac root lurking at the back of the salad drawer always puts me in mind of a medieval theologian’s diatribes about the appearance of my soul. The evil-looking celeriac reveals a mixture of ambition and incompetence. . . . This is a book of hallucinatory wonder by a Science Museum keeper who writes with that rare combination of synoptic, grandiose academic majesty, and wry humor. Midnight kitchen wanderers know the strange light an open fridge casts into darkness. Peavitt’s Refrigerator illuminates not just our kitchens, but our entire value system."
— Stephen Bayley, Spectator
"Peavitt’s intriguing nose-dive into the history of this pivotal but everyday invention exposes the role household technology and its increasingly rapid development plays in dictating socioeconomic identifiers. . . . Whether you’re packing twenty bottles of Cristal or hoarding a four-day-old lasagne in the run up to payday, the brilliantly researched stories and nostalgic photographs in Peavitt’s ode to cool are bound to make you smile."
— AnOther
"Peavitt’s multifaceted exploration of domestic refrigeration is a worthy and entertaining read, enriched by an extensive collection of historical photographs, illustrations, and advertisements. Her discussions of the technology involved are elegant and illuminating, as are her descriptions of the myriad ways in which domestic refrigeration influenced (and still influences) culture, in the kitchen and well beyond."
— Dianne Timblin, American Scientist
"Peavitt's book is distinctive for the illustrations that accompany nearly every page; many of these are drawn from the Museum collections. . . . The book is well edited and thoroughly documented; Peavitt's prose flows smoothly. This reviewer can see it selling well in the Museum bookshop and being used to accompany history of technology courses. Recommended."
— Choice
"Peavitt’s primary interest is in the wide-ranging effects of refrigeration, and that is the great strength of the book. . . . An important contribution to the general history of refrigeration."
— Technology and Culture