Best-sellers

Best-sellers

Fiction

  1. THE MIDNIGHT LINE by Lee Child. Jack Reacher tracks down the owner of a pawned West Point class ring and stumbles upon a large criminal enterprise.

  2. THE ROOSTER BAR by John Grisham. Three students at a sleazy for-profit law school hope to expose the student-loan banker who runs it.

  3. ORIGIN by Dan Brown. A symbology professor goes on a perilous quest with a beautiful museum director.

  4. TWO KINDS OF TRUTH by Michael Connelly. While he investigates the murder of two pharmacists, an old case comes back to haunt Harry Bosch.

  5. TYPHOON FURY by Clive Cussler and Boyd Morrison. Juan Cabrillo chases a Filipino insurgent during a megastorm.

  6. THE NOEL DIARY by Richard Paul Evans. A romance writer delves into a stranger's past when his estranged mother leaves her extremely stuffed house to him.

  7. EVERY BREATH YOU TAKE by Mary Higgins Clark and Alafair Burke. Laurie Moran investigates the murder of a wealthy widow who was pushed from the roof of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

  8. THE HOUSE OF UNEXPECTED SISTERS by Alexander McCall Smith, During an investigation, Precious Ramotswe encounters a man from her past and a nurse who has her last name.

  9. IN THIS MOMENT by Karen Kingsbury. A lawyer defends a public high school principal who starts an after-school Bible study program.

  10. UNCOMMON TYPE by Tom Hanks. Seventeen short stories, each incorporating a typewriter, by the Academy Award-winning actor.

Nonfiction

  1. OBAMA by Pete Souza. More than 300 pictures of the former president by his White House photographer, with behind-the-scenes stories.

  2. LEONARDO DA VINCI by Walter Isaacson. A biography of the Italian Renaissance polymath which connects his work in various disciplines.

  3. BOBBY KENNEDY by Chris Matthews. The New York senator's journey from his formative years to his tragic run for president.

  4. GRANT by Ron Chernow. A biography of the Union general of the Civil War and two-term president of the United States.

  5. SISTERS FIRST by Jenna Bush Hager and Barbara Pierce Bush. How the twin daughters of former president George W. Bush grew up in the public eye.

  6. HACKS by Donna Brazile. An account of the Russian hacking of the Democratic National Committee and the fights within the party during the 2016 campaign.

  7. ANDREW JACKSON AND THE MIRACLE OF NEW ORLEANS by Brian Kilmeade and Don Yaeger. Major General Jackson takes on the British in Louisiana.

  8. WHAT UNITES US by Dan Rather and Elliot Kirschner. A collection of essays that define the historical changes and essential institutions of America to suggest ways to overcome divisions within the country.

  9. KILLING ENGLAND by Bill O'Reilly and Martin Dugard. Major events and battles during the Revolutionary War are told from several perspectives.

  10. WE WERE EIGHT YEARS IN POWER by Ta-Nehisi Coates. A series of essays that cover each year of the Obama administration and the writer's own journey.

Paperback fiction

  1. THE SUN AND HER FLOWERS by Rupi Kaur.

  2. MILK AND HONEY by Rupi Kaur.

  3. IT by Stephen King.

  4. COUNT TO TEN by James Patterson and Ashwin Sanghi.

  5. THE HANDMAID'S TALE by Margaret Atwood.

Paperback nonfiction

  1. THANK YOU FOR BEING LATE by Thomas L. Friedman.

  2. THE UNDOING PROJECT by Michael Lewis.

  3. BEING MORTAL by Atul Gawande.

  4. THE GLASS CASTLE by Jeannette Walls.

  5. SAME KIND OF DIFFERENT AS ME by Ron Hall and Denver Moore with Lynn Vincent.

Source: New York Times

Editorial on 12/03/2017

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