Check out The Telegraph’s review of Evensong:
When does the slide into old age begin? With a number? Or does it begin to manifest at the point at which a person starts to become invisible? These are the questions posed by Evensong, the latest book from American novelist Stewart O’Nan, and his fourth to include the character of octogenarian widow Emily Maxwell. In this novel, she’s a member of the Humpty Dumpty Club, a group of women of a certain age who band together to help one another and their local ageing community with everyday chores – grocery shopping; collecting prescriptions – in their native Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
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Plus Evensong appears on two best of 2025 lists:

“Evensong” by Stewart O’Nan (Atlantic Monthly Press, $28) is a layered novel of women’s friendships as they age together and support one another. The characters are warm and funny, there are a few times when your heart will sit in your throat, and you won’t be sorry you read it. It’s just plain irresistible.

‘Evensong’
By Stewart O’Nan
I’m only just now realizing how many of my favorite novels this year are about families grappling with rapidly changing circumstances in their lives and in the world. In this one, Emily Maxwell (from previous O’Nan novels, including “Emily, Alone”) is a member of the Humpty Dumpty Club, a community of women who take care of one another in the retirement community where most of them live. O’Nan’s book closely observes the everyday joys and sorrows of their life, paying particular attention to the ways in which the women have created a new kind of family.
