BEST-SELLERS

Best-sellers

Fiction

  1. THE OBSESSION, by Nora Roberts. A woman is haunted by her father’s crimes as she tries to pursue love and her work as a photographer.

  2. THE NEST, by Cynthia D’Aprix Sweeney. Siblings in a dysfunctional New York family must grapple with a reduced inheritance.

  3. FOOL ME ONCE, by Harlan Coben. A retired Army helicopter pilot faces combat- related nightmares and mysteries concerning the deaths of her husband and sister.

  4. AS TIME GOES BY, by Mary Higgins Clark. Secrets emerge when a television journalist searching for her birth mother covers the trial of the widow of a wealthy doctor.

  5. MOST WANTED, by Lisa Scottoline. A woman discovers that her sperm donor is a murderer.

  6. THE NIGHTINGALE, by Kristin Hannah. Two sisters in World War II France: one struggling to survive in the countryside, the other joining the Resistance in Paris.

  7. MILLER’S VALLEY, by Anna Quindlen. A young woman comes of age during an assault on the land and the people she loves.

  8. ALL THE LIGHT WE CANNOT SEE, by Anthony Doerr. The lives of a blind French girl and a gadget-obsessed German boy before and during World War II.

  9. THE 14TH COLONY, by Steve Berry. The covert operative Cotton Malone must thwart an agent loyal to the former Soviet Union.

  10. THE GIRL ON THE TRAIN, by Paula Hawkins. A psychological thriller set in the environs of London.

Nonfiction

  1. HAMILTON: THE REVOLUTION, by Lin-Manuel Miranda and Jeremy McCarter. The libretto of the Grammy- and Pulitzer Prize-winning musical, annotated by its creator, along with backstage photos, a production history and interviews with the cast.

  2. THE RAINBOW COMES AND GOES, by Anderson Cooper and Gloria Vanderbilt. Mother and son discuss their relationship and difficult family history.

  3. THE SLEEP REVOLUTION, by Arianna Huffington.What scientific research reveals about the dangers of sleep deprivation.

  4. WHEN BREATH BECOMES AIR, by Paul Kalanithi. A memoir by a physician who received a diagnosis of Stage IV lung cancer at the age of 36.

  5. THE THIRD WAVE, by Steve Case. In the current era, entrepreneurs will use technology to revolutionize various sectors of the economy.

  6. FIRST WOMEN, by Kate Andersen Brower. The 10 first ladies since 1960, based on interviews with White House staff, social secretaries and friends.

  7. BETWEEN THE WORLD AND ME, by Ta-Nehisi Coates. A meditation on race in America; winner of the National Book Award.

  8. SEVEN BRIEF LESSONS ON PHYSICS, by Carlo Rovelli. An introduction to modern physics.

  9. LAB GIRL, by Hope Jahren. A geobiologist shares her fascination with plants and her vocation.

  10. BEING MORTAL, by Atul Gawande. The surgeon and New Yorker writer considers how doctors fail patients at the end of life and how they can do better.

Paperback fiction

  1. ONE WITH YOU, by Sylvia Day. Fighting for the love to which they have committed could set Gideon and Eva free, or break them apart; the finale of the Crossfire series.

  2. ME BEFORE YOU, by Jojo Moyes. A young woman who has barely been farther afield than her English village finds herself while caring for a wealthy, embittered quadriplegic.

  3. THE MURDER HOUSE, by James Patterson and David Ellis. When bodies are found at a Hamptons estate where a series of grisly murders once occurred, a local detective and former New York City cop investigates.

  4. A MAN CALLED OVE, by Fredrik Backman. An angry old curmudgeon gets new next-door neighbors, and things are about to change for all of them.

  5. THE GUILTY, by David Baldacci. Will Robie, the government’s ace assassin, learns that his estranged father is charged with murder, but his investigation is unwelcome.

Paperback nonfiction

  1. DEAD WAKE, by Erik Larson. The tragic final voyage of the luxury ship Lusitania, sunk by a German submarine in 1915.

  2. ALEXANDER HAMILTON, by Ron Chernow. First published in 2004, this biography of a founding father was turned into the Pulitzer-winning hip-hop musical Hamilton.

  3. THE BOYS IN THE BOAT, by Daniel James Brown. American rowers pursue gold at the 1936 Berlin Olympic Games.

  4. H IS FOR HAWK, by Helen Macdonald. A grief-stricken British woman decides to raise a goshawk, a fierce bird that is notoriously difficult to tame.

  5. THE POWER OF HABIT, by Charles Duhigg. An examination of the science behind habits—how we form them and break them.

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