I have to agree with the other reviewers, it was hard to put this book down! Although it was originally published in 1980 it seems fresh enough to have been written last week. I approached the book from two different directions. First, I love a good mystery and that's what the book description promised that it would be. Second, I am a big fan of the Catskills and I knew that anything written by Tania Grossinger would be genuine AND fascinating, since she did in fact "Grow up at Grossinger's." I've also read most of her published material (I would never say "I've read everything she's ever written" because that would not be true for any author!) and it was all excellent, especially "Growing Up at Grossinger's" and "Memoir of an Independent Woman." So, without repeating what everyone else has said, let me just say that it was a sparkling mystery that I literally could not put down until I finished it. Not only did have an intriguing plot, but the characters were all extremely well developed and I felt like I CARED about all of them, even if I didn't LIKE all of them. It reminded me somewhat of a disaster movie like Airport in that there were so many characters to keep track of, and they all had different and distinct characteristics. But they were fully developed and were not caricatures or stereotypes. As far as the Catskills setting goes, I have to repeat the term I used earlier, and that is GENUINE. I'm sure the resort, called the Congress in the book, was modeled significantly on Grossinger's, where Ms. Grossinger was raised, but I also know that she has enough of a broad perspective on the Catskill resort industry that she was able to draw on her knowledge of many other resorts and thus present the Congress as a composite. If you have any interest in Catskills history this book is a must, because it puts the reader right smack in the middle of a major Catskill resort, and you can just feel the grandeur of the physical setting and the many colorful characters that populated it. In addition, you got a real sense as to why the resort industry collapsed, given the daily operational and financial pressures that the hotel owners faced.
In summary, "Weekend" is probably not the great American novel, but it is a fascinating read that you do not want to miss.