A lovely, insightful exploration of aging, regrets and rebirth. People
Wood has several surprises up her sleeve; her characters have loved often, lived large and taken plenty of risks, which makes for quick, Liane Moriarty-esque reading. She also has an eye for the little moments that link us, sometimes past the point of reason, to people whose histories we share. The New York Times
If you ve ever thought to yourself, I wish there were a beach read kind of like the movie Book Club, but more emotionally complex look no further. Entertainment Weekly
The Weekend is a bittersweet celebration of growing old together and an exploration of how complicated female friendships are. HelloGiggles
[A] dark, smart comedy of manners . . . For a reader in or facing the demographic of Wood s three friends, The Weekend is both fascinating and chilling. Not just the question of superannuated friendships, but also past-prime careers, aging bodies, senior finances and calcifying personality traits are all fairly coldly examined here. . . . Star Tribune
Old age is a state of mutiny rather than stasis in this glorious, forthright tale of female friendship. . . . What gives the book its glorious, refreshing, forthright spine is that each woman is still adamantly (often disastrously) alive, and still less afraid of death than irrelevance. The Guardian (London)
Capture summer (even if you can't leave your house) with a tender read dripping in easy nostalgia. Marie Claire
The Weekend captivated me from the excellent opening chapter. . . . The three main characters Jude, Adele and Wendy are superbly drawn. . . . his wise, funny novel will help you understand yourself and it may scare the s*** out of anyone brave enough to confront the truths within its masterful pages. The Independent (London)
Wood finds a beautiful balance between her three women, swivelling between their perspectives on the present and their shared past. The gaps between how a character sees themselves and how their friends see them are astutely drawn, both painfully comic and frequently heartbreaking. . . . Wood is to be praised for taking female friendship seriously and for being caustically honest there s not a sentimental line in this beautifully insightful book. The Observer (London)
Three seventy-something women spend Christmas together and find new tensions in their long friendship. With the lightest of touches, this big-hearted, insightful read tackles friendship, ambition, aging and death. Good Housekeeping
A darkly funny, truthful novel . . . There is endless pleasure to be found in the candor and compassion Wood brings to bear on femininity and female friendship. Metro (UK)
A lovely, lively, intelligent, funny book . . . So good on aging and on the fraught, warm friendships between women. Tessa Hadley, author of The Past
I found reading The Weekend both hypnotic and profoundly unsettling. The prose is sharply vivid and precise, the characters and location exceptionally real, and I challenge anyone to write a better description of an elderly dog and its owner. Masterful. Rosamund Lupton, author of Sister and Three Hours
The Weekend positively hums with life even as these three women are approaching the end of theirs. The book is exquisitely wrenching and poignant when dealing with female friendship and old age, yet it still manages to be funny and very real. Claire Fuller, author of Our Endless Numbered Days
Friendship, ambition, love, sexual politics, and death: it s all here in one sharp, funny, heartbreaking, and gorgeously written package. I loved it. Paula Hawkins, #1 The New York Times bestselling author of The Girl on the Train
An insightful, poignant, and fiercely honest novel about female friendship and female aging. Sigrid Nunez, National Book Award winning author of The Friend The Weekend is more Big Chill.. . . with a dash of Big Little Lies . . . A novel about decluttering and real estate, about the geometry of friendship, about sexual politics, and about how we change. The Guardian (London)
The Weekend is an unflinchingly observed celebration of the profundity and mundanity of friendship, treated with elegance, wit, and tenderness. Kiran Millwood Hargrave, author of The Mercies
Wow, wow, wow, wow, wow. The Australian (Sydney) Wood s technique in this novel is masterly. The Sydney Morning Herald One of the best novels of the year. The Saturday Paper (Australia)
Charlotte Wood is the author of six novels and two books of nonfiction. Her 2016 novel The Natural Way of Things won the Stella Prize, the Indie Book of the Year, and the Novel of the Year in her native Australia, and was joint winner of the Australian Prime Minister s Literary Award for Fiction. Her 2020 novel, The Weekend,is an international bestseller, shortlisted for the Stella Prize, and longlisted for the Miles Franklin Award. In 2019 Wood was made a Member of the Order of Australia for significant services to literature.