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Evensong : a novel / Stewart O'Nan.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: New York : Atlantic Monthly Press, 2025Copyright date: ©2025Edition: First edition; First Grove Atlantic hardcover editionDescription: 285 pages ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9780802166432
  • 0802166431
Other title:
  • Even song
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Online version: EvensongDDC classification:
  • 813/.54 23/eng/20251110
LOC classification:
  • PS3565.N316 E89 2025
Summary: The Humpty Dumpty Club is distraught when their powerhouse leader, Joan Hargrove, takes a bad fall down her stairs, knocking her out of commission. Now, as well as running errands and shepherding those less able to their doctors' appointments, they have to pick up the slack. Between navigating their own relationships and aging bodies and attending choir practice, these invisible yet indomitable women help where they can. They bake cookies, they care for pets, they pick up prescriptions, they sit vigil by the sick, and most of all, they show up for the people they've pledged to help. In the face of death, divorce, and the myriad directions our lives can take, the Humpty Dumpty club represents the power of community and chosen family.
List(s) this item appears in: New Adult Fiction Fiction notes: Click to open in new window
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Shelving location Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult Book Phillipsburg Free Public Library Adult Fiction New Books FIC O'NAN Checked out 01/26/2026 36748002629758
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

"Stewart O'Nan has been one of the best chroniclers of the lives of American women." - Susan Straight

An intimate, moving novel that follows The Humpty Dumpty Club, a group of women of a certain age who band together to help one another and their circle of friends in Pittsburgh as they face the challenges of their golden years

The Humpty Dumpty Club is distraught when their powerhouse leader, Joan Hargrove, takes a bad fall down her stairs, knocking her out of commission. Now, as well as running errands and shepherding those less able to their doctors' appointments, they have to pick up the slack.

Between navigating their own relationships and aging bodies and attending choir practice, these invisible yet indomitable women help where they can. They bake cookies, they care for pets, they pick up prescriptions, they sit vigil by the sick, and most of all, they show up for the people they've pledged to help. In the face of death, divorce, and the myriad directions our lives can take, the Humpty Dumpty club represents the power of community and chosen family.

Weaving together the perspectives of the four cardinal members as they tend to those in need, Stewart O'Nan revisits beloved characters from his past work -- most notably Emily Maxwell -- to fashion a rich and moving novel that celebrates our capacity for patience and care. Vivid, warm, and often wryly funny, Evensong reminds us that life is made up of moments both climactic and quotidian, and we weather those moments with the people we choose to keep close.

The Humpty Dumpty Club is distraught when their powerhouse leader, Joan Hargrove, takes a bad fall down her stairs, knocking her out of commission. Now, as well as running errands and shepherding those less able to their doctors' appointments, they have to pick up the slack. Between navigating their own relationships and aging bodies and attending choir practice, these invisible yet indomitable women help where they can. They bake cookies, they care for pets, they pick up prescriptions, they sit vigil by the sick, and most of all, they show up for the people they've pledged to help. In the face of death, divorce, and the myriad directions our lives can take, the Humpty Dumpty club represents the power of community and chosen family.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Publishers Weekly Review

O'Nan (Last Night at the Lobster) once again finds extraordinary resonance in the lives of ordinary people. In Pittsburgh, 89-year-old Joan Hargrove, leader of the Humpty Dumpty Club, a group of elderly women who help each other out, lives the "nightmare" they all share when she falls down a flight of stairs and breaks her leg. With Joan recovering in the hospital, it's left to other club members to fill the void: Kitzi delivers prescriptions to Gene and Jean Sokolov, brother-and-sister hoarders who live with a houseful of cats, and slowly becomes enmeshed in the siblings' lives; Susie, a divorcee, takes care of Joan's cat and finds romance with a retired postal worker who plays in a bluegrass band. Meanwhile, Emily, a recurring character in O'Nan's fiction, is having trouble with her sister-in-law, who is showing the first signs of dementia. The drama here is strictly low-key (a funeral is the emotional high point), but O'Nan proves that he has no peers when it comes to evoking the quotidian challenges and routines of daily life. It's a bittersweet celebration of the twilight years. Agent: David Gernert, Gernert Co. (Nov.)

Booklist Review

The women of Pittsburgh's Humpty Dumpty Club take care of each other and help struggling community members. Joan has long been in charge; when she takes a bad fall, her friends and fellow members look after her and take on her responsibilities. Kitzi works to earn the trust of Jean and Gene, a reclusive couple at risk of losing their home. Recent divorcée Susie takes in Joan's cat. Emily (a recurring character) negotiates her fraught relationship with her daughter, a recovering addict, while her sister-in-law, Arlene, faces dementia. The characters take turns narrating and some chapters are told from the perspectives of the whole group while they're gathered at lunch or bridge. The novel follows the trajectories of the women's lives as they move towards the local assisted living facility: "Longwood, the next to last stop. With each passing year it loomed greater in their imaginations, like Death, or Heaven." Likewise, the women's longtime participation in their Anglican church's evensong serves as a touchstone as they approach the twilight of their lives. Fans of Kent Haruf's Our Souls at Night (2015) and Elizabeth Strout's Olive, Again (2019) will appreciate the dignity O'Nan (Ocean State, 2022) affords his characters as they navigate both the dramatic and the mundane moments in their lives.

Kirkus Book Review

Older women grapple with changes in their lives and in Pittsburgh's East End. Quarrelsome but inseparable sisters-in-law Emily and Arlene will be familiar to readers of three previous novels about the Maxwell family (Henry, Himself, 2019, etc.); they are joined here by two other core members of the Humpty Dumpty Club, a social and mutual aid organization for senior citizens. At 63, Susie is "the baby of the group," still active in their church choir (the rest have aged out) and building a new life after a divorce. Harassed Kitzi, whose husband has severe heart disease and needs considerable care, finds herself de facto leader of the club after their president, Joan, takes a bad fall and is hospitalized. There's lots to deal with: The HDs have a long list of neighbors who need to be taken to doctors' appointments, have prescriptions picked up or meals delivered. O'Nan, whose 18 previous novels range from gritty accounts of working-class life to international political thrillers, skillfully shifts among four points of view as he chronicles the HDs' activities from September 2022 to January 2023. Kitzi frets about neglecting her husband as she gets enmeshed in the affairs of an elderly couple who live in squalor amid an army of cats and are threatened with eviction. Susie, tending to Joan's apartment and cat, wages a covert power struggle with Joan's daughter, whose visits from Austin, Texas, aren't frequent or long enough for the disapproving HDs. Arlene struggles with increasingly serious memory lapses while Emily, though clearly worried about her, serves mostly as a crochety voice at HD meetings. This frank depiction of people nearing the ends of their lives might sound bleak, but O'Nan's brilliantly rendered characters refuse to be pitied, matter-of-factly accepting loss and physical decline as they go about their days quietly sustained by their faith and commitment to service. Unsentimental yet deeply moving: more wonderful work from the versatile, masterful O'Nan. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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