Evensong by O'Nan has gotten a lot of press and sounded like a good book for a Yinzer to read. But it was the fourth an a series and so I began at the beginning of the series. O'Nan is originally from Pittsburgh and his roots shine through this work at almost every turn from the references to the city, its restaurants, and arts and culture.
The novel covers the week that the Maxwell family spends at Lake Chautauqua and the surrounding area. It is a favorite summer destination for those from the Pittsburgh and where people have a summer home. The family consists of Emily, who owns their cottage and is recently widowed, her sister-in-law Arlene and Emily's children Meg and Ken, Ken's wife Lisa and their children Sam and Ella, and Meg's children Justin and Sarah. They are all gathering for one final vacation because Emily is selling the summer home.
Because of O'Nan's incredible mastery of description and insight, the reader understands the personality of each of the characters. In reality, it is very much like a psychoanalytic experience. The interaction between the family members is suggestive of how many families would act and react during a week where they all lived under one roof in small quarters. O'Nan uses the weather, rainy and dreary, to force more dialogue and communication among them. The reader is privy to teenage angst, budding sexuality, sibling rivalry, and marital strife.
At the heart of the novel is Emily's desire to have her children take items that are especially meaningful to them as remembrances of their many years of vacationing on the lake as well as of their late father. It is something that inevitably every family experiences and the manner in which they go about it will hit home with many. They try to relive past adventures, restaurants, and familiar activities. With his mastery of description, O'Nan allows the reader to be privy to all the thoughts and vulnerabilities of the Maxwell family.
The book is one of the most skilled examples of character study that I have read. It is definitely a treasure, especially for those who do not mind a long and detailed tome. I really did not want the book to end, but I will meet up with the family in his later books.

