"This impressive study of the modern Japanese home takes the reader into the domestic worlds of middle-class men and women, showing how aesthetic practices are shaped by national ideologies regarding gender and the family, as well as by a sense of the past encountering the transformative energies of modernization. - David Morgan, Duke UniversityShould be widely read and loudly applauded. - Design and CultureThis is an absolutely fascinating book - well written, superbly researched inside Japanese homes and written with passion. Without a doubt the best book I have read on modern Japan. - Brighton & Hove Anglo Japanese NetworkThis book should be read by all those interested in researching the meaning of home, whether they have an interest in Japan or not. Likewise, for specialists on Japanese society, this text will transform perceptions of the house and home as a focus for broader cultural understandings. - Housing StudiesThere are many more conclusions to be drawn from the rich materials presented and I recommend this book to everyone with an interest in Japan, material culture, architecture, and visual methods. Furthermore, it is a prime example of what ethnography can achieve (and living quality surveys etc. cannot). - Home CulturesDaniels investigates how highly private domestic lives are lived in Japan. Examining the living quarters of the Japanese, she looks into every aspect of the home and daily life, from decoration, display, furniture and the tatami mat to eating, sleeping, gift-giving, recycling and worship. - Times Higher Education"