Evenings and Weekends: A Novel

“This is such a love story to cities & people & heartbreaks, death & loss. It's not at all corny, it's smart. But I just finished it & it made me cry.” — Eileen Myles

"Signals the arrival of a novelist sure to resonate with young people who endeavor to make intimate connections." —The Washington Post

For fans of Sally Rooney and Torrey Peters, a stunning debut that follows a vibrant multi-generational cast of characters through a London heatwave as their simmering tensions and secrets come to a head over a feverish, life-changing weekend.

Summer in London stops for no one. Not the half-naked drunks and stoners, the bachelorette parties glugging from bejewelled bottles, the drag queens puffing on hurried cigarettes. It’s June 2019, and everyone has converged on the city’s parks, beer gardens, and street corners to revel in the collective joys of being alive.

Everyone but Maggie. She’s 30, pregnant, and broke. Faced with moving back to the town she fought to escape, she’s wondering if having a baby with boyfriend Ed will be the last spontaneous act of her life. Ed, meanwhile, is trying to run from his past with Maggie’s best friend Phil and harboring secret dreams of his own.

Phil hates his office job and is living for the weekend, while falling for his housemate, Keith. But there’s a problem: Keith has a boyfriend and there might not be room for three people in the relationship. Then there’s Rosaleen, Phil’s mother, who’s tired of feeling like a side character in her own life. She’s just been diagnosed with cancer and is travelling to London to tell Phil, if she can ever get hold of him.

As Saturday night approaches, all their lives are set to change forever. Temperatures are soaring and the weekend is about to begin…

Strikingly heartfelt, sexually charged, and disarmingly comic, Oisín McKenna’s debut is a mesmerizing dive into the soul of a city and a searing look at what it takes to build a life there.

BUY THE BOOK

Published Jul 2, 2024

352 pages

Average rating: 6.49

63 RATINGS

|

Join a book club that is reading Evenings and Weekends: A Novel!

Bee's Bookclub

A cosy little book club for readers who love contemporary fiction (and the occasional classic). We meet to share thoughtful conversation, fresh perspectives and a genuine appreciation for great storytelling

Community Reviews

Kirsty1212
May 11, 2026
4/10 stars
Slow moving..
lexie
Apr 27, 2026
6/10 stars
started of really strong for me, loved the ensemble cast, messiness, and contrast in characters. as the plot moved forward i became super bored at 70% mark, leading up the the party. withheld secrets and miscommunication is used as a means to drag out the story/move readers forward but it became quite frustrating. there were random povs that were sprinkled in which begged for more context or seemed like filler. basically a lot of this seemed like filler. i get wanting to get into the heads of each character is order to develop the story and build up to the climax but there are unneeded scenes.
Casey O
Apr 20, 2026
8/10 stars
i took some time to warm to this but ended it nearly in tears, so lovely and carefully considered. it made me homesick for dublin, and my dad who died last year, and of being young and feeling everything was still possible.
OBC
Feb 18, 2026
The group found Evenings and Weekends to be a vivid and introspective read, with a London setting that felt both lively and isolating. They noted the book’s compressed timeline as effective in heightening tension while allowing intimate glimpses into the characters’ lives. The shifting perspectives offered a nuanced view of identity, self-reflection, and the queer experience, though some found the open-ended conclusion slightly unresolved. The whale motif stood out as a striking, symbolic presence, adding a sense of wonder and melancholy. Overall, the book sparked thoughtful discussion, leaving members reflecting on connection, longing, and the complexities of modern life.
Janicks
Feb 02, 2026
6/10 stars
3.5⭐️

I really enjoyed this. It felt like I was amongst friends and watching them live their lives, make mistakes and just do normal human stuff during a hot summer in london. Enjoyed the fact that the fictional story wound itself around the real life whale in the Thames story.

See why thousands of readers are using Bookclubs to stay connected.