“Hunt’s richly textured and highly readable account sheds new light on Evelyn. . . . This is more than a biography. It is an invaluable insight into a world in intellectual ferment, on the brink of the modern age.”
— Tom Williamson, University of East Anglia
"Hunt explains that for Evelyn 'domesticity' had a double meaning: his home life, but also the domestication of 'foreign ideas, new theories, new resources and technologies, as well as learning to live with a rapidly changing and expanding world.' It is in this second sense that Evelyn steps forward, a man ahead of his time with concerns that resonate in the twenty-first century."
— Ruth Scurr, Times Literary Supplement
"Hunt’s John Evelyn: A Life of Domesticity contains ten color plates and forty halftones, is well produced and bound, and in short remarkable value and inexpensive. . . . [A] fine study."
— Year's Work in English Studies
"Hunt plays with the concept of the 'domestic' both in its sense of life in the home and the family, relationships, and beliefs, and in the seventeenth-century sense of 'domesticating' (ie, bringing home from abroad) ideas from elsewhere. Hunt describes a man who combined a strict adherence to the scientific and empirical principles of Sir Francis Bacon with a most un-English openness to Continental advances in garden-making. Hunt is particularly interesting on the last decades of Evelyn’s life, a period largely ignored by other biographers."
— Historic Gardens
"Evelyn’s diaries and correspondence provide a rich source of material, and these have been expertly distilled to provide insights into the seventeenth-century life of a landowner and scholar. . . . Anyone interested in the development of garden design, particularly in the latter half of the seventeenth century, will find this book a rich source of ideas. . . . Despite the existence of several earlier biographies it stands as a definitive account of domesticity in both senses: on the one hand, home life, and on the other, the process of assimilating new ideas into the national consciousness."
— Garden History
"Hunt’s thoroughly illustrated book takes readers on a journey through John Evelyn’s efforts at domesticity. . . . Hunt addresses, in a balanced way, key moments from Evelyn’s public and personal life, family, home, and interests. What emerges is a fresh portrait of the acclaimed seventeenth-century figure, one that paints him as a man intent upon employing his personal pursuits for the betterment of England. . . . Hunt’s book is lucid, well-documented, and an informative read for those looking to explore John Evelyn as a keen gardener, an avid learner, and an instructor, both inside and outside of the family. . . . This text [is] a most useful tool in pulling the curtain a little further back on the renowned gardener and intellectual."
— Renaissance and Reformation
"The book has a number of beautiful color images. . . . Hunt declares the Character of England 'great fun to read'; I declare John Evelyn: A Life of Domesticity great fun to read."
— Studies in English Literature 1500–1900
"A principal theme of his biography is his achievement in making European garden arts accessible to a British audience and in influencing estate design and management. . . . Evelyn’s diaries and correspondence provide a rich source of material, and these have been expertly distilled to provide insights into the seventeenth century life of a landowner and scholar. . . . Anyone interested in the development of garden design, particularly in the latter half of the seventeenth century, will find this book a rich source of ideas. . . . Despite the existence of several earlier biographies it stands as a definitive account of a domesticity in both senses: on the one hand, home life; and on the other, the process of assimilating new ideas into the national consciousness."
— Bulletin of the Welsh Historic Gardens Trust