Best-sellers

Best-sellers

Best-sellers

Fiction

  1. SOOLEY by John Grisham. Samuel Sooleymon receives a basketball scholarship to North Carolina Central and is determined to bring his family over from a civil war-ravaged South Sudan.

  2. THE HILL WE CLIMB by Amanda Gorman. The poem read on President Joe Biden's Inauguration Day, by the youngest poet to write and perform an inaugural poem.

  3. FINDING ASHLEY by Danielle Steel. Two estranged sisters, one a former best-selling author, the other a nun, reconnect as one searches for the child the other gave up.

  4. A GAMBLING MAN by David Baldacci. Aloysius Archer, a World War II veteran, seeks to apprentice with Willie Dash, a private eye, in a corrupt California town.

  5. THE FOUR WINDS by Kristin Hannah. As dust storms roll during the Great Depression, Elsa must choose between saving the family and farm or heading west.

  6. THE MIDNIGHT LIBRARY by Matt Haig. Nora Seed finds a library beyond the edge of the universe that contains books with multiple possibilities of the lives one could have lived.

  7. OCEAN PREY by John Sandford. The 31st book in the Prey series. When federal officers are killed, Lucas Davenport and Virgil Flowers team up to investigate matters.

  8. WHEREABOUTS by Jhumpa Lahiri. A woman who feels lost in life finds solace in the city she calls home.

  9. THE INVISIBLE LIFE OF ADDIE LARUE by V.E. Schwab. A Faustian bargain comes with a curse that affects the adventure Addie LaRue has across centuries.

  10. THRAWN ASCENDANCY: GREATER GOOD by Timothy Zahn. In this Star Wars saga, Thrawn and the Expansionary Defense Fleet discover how their enemy truly operates.

Nonfiction

  1. WHAT HAPPENED TO YOU? by Bruce D. Perry and Oprah Winfrey. An approach to dealing with trauma that shifts an essential question used to investigate it.

  2. THE BOMBER MAFIA by Malcolm Gladwell. A look at the key players and outcomes of precision bombing during World War II.

  3. YOU ARE YOUR BEST THING edited by Tarana Burke and Brené Brown. An anthology of writing on the Black experience and shame resilience.

  4. HOW Y'ALL DOING? by Leslie Jordan. A collection of essays by the Emmy-winning actor who became a viral sensation without knowing what that phrase meant at the time.

  5. OUT OF MANY, ONE by George W. Bush. Forty-three portraits by the former president of men and women who have immigrated to the United States.

  6. CRYING IN H MART by Michelle Zauner. The daughter of a Korean mother and Jewish-American father and leader of indie rock project Japanese Breakfast describes creating her own identity after losing her mother to cancer.

  7. UNTAMED by Glennon Doyle. The activist and public speaker describes her journey of listening to her inner voice.

  8. CASTE by Isabel Wilkerson. The Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist examines aspects of caste systems across civilizations and reveals a rigid hierarchy in America today.

  9. GREENLIGHTS by Matthew McConaughey. The Academy Award-winning actor shares snippets from the diaries he kept over the last 35 years.

  10. THE CODE BREAKER by Walter Isaacson. How the Nobel Prize winner Jennifer Doudna and her colleagues invented CRISPR, a tool that can edit DNA.

Paperback fiction

  1. WHERE THE CRAWDADS SING by Delia Owens.

  2. THE SONG OF ACHILLES by Madeline Miller.

  3. LATER by Stephen King.

  4. THE ROSE CODE by Kate Quinn.

  5. THE SEVEN HUSBANDS OF EVELYN HUGO by Taylor Jenkins Reid.

Paperback nonfiction

  1. THE BODY KEEPS THE SCORE by Bessel van der Kolk.

  2. NOMADLAND by Jessica Bruder.

  3. BRAIDING SWEETGRASS by Robin Wall Kimmerer.

  4. MY GRANDMOTHER'S HANDS by Resmaa Menakem.

  5. BECOMING by Michelle Obama.

Source: The New York Times

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