Best-sellers

Fiction

  1. TURBO TWENTY-THREE by Janet Evanovich. Bounty hunter Stephanie Plum juggles the investigation of a crime in an ice cream factory and the two men in her life.

  2. NO MAN’S LAND by David Baldacci. John Puller, a special agent with the Army, searches for the truth about his mother who disappeared 30 years ago.

  3. THE WHISTLER by John Grisham. A whistle-blower alerts a Florida investigator to judicial corruption involving the mob and Indian casinos.

  4. NIGHT SCHOOL by Lee Child. Jack Reacher, still in the Army, becomes involved in an investigation with elite agents from the FBI and CIA.

  5. ODESSA SEA by Clive Cussler and Dirk Cussler. Trying to locate an Ottoman shipwreck in the Black Sea, NUMA director Dirk Pitt encounters more than he expected.

  6. TWO BY TWO by Nicholas Sparks. A man who became a single father when his marriage and business collapsed learns to take a chance on a new love.

  7. CHAOS by Patricia Cornwell. In the 24th novel in this series, forensic pathologist Kay Scarpetta investigates a death that seems to have been (but was not) caused by lightning. Is her old nemesis Carrie Grethen involved?

  8. THE MISTLETOE SECRET by Richard Paul Evans. A man struggling with the aftermath of a divorce sets out to find the anonymous writer of a blog about loneliness, and discovers more than he expected.

  9. THE WRONG SIDE OF GOODBYE by Michael Connelly. Detective Harry Bosch helps a small police department track a serial rapist, while as a private investigator he aids a billionaire in search of a possible heir.

  10. CATALYST by James Luceno. This novel sets the stage for Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, to be released this month.

Nonfiction

  1. SETTLE FOR MORE by Megyn Kelly. The anchor of Fox News’ The Kelly File discusses her upbringing, why she left a successful career as a lawyer, the value of hard work, and the personal and professional challenges she has faced.

  2. KILLING THE RISING SUN by Bill O’Reilly and Martin Dugard. The host of The O’Reilly Factor recounts the final years of World War II.

  3. OUR REVOLUTION by Bernie Sanders. The Vermont senator and former candidate for the Democratic nomination for president delivers his message of social and economic justice.

  4. HILLBILLY ELEGY by J. D. Vance. A Yale Law School graduate looks at the struggles of America’s white working class through his own childhood in the Rust Belt.

  5. SCRAPPY LITTLE NOBODY by Anna Kendrick. Autobiographical essays by the young actress.

  6. THE MAGNOLIA STORY by Chip Gaines and Joanna Gaines with Mark Dagostino. The lives of the couple who star in the HGTV show Fixer Upper.

  7. BORN A CRIME by Trevor Noah. A memoir about growing up in South Africa by the comedian and host of The Daily Show whose birth was the result of an illegal (under apartheid) relationship between a white Swiss father and a black Xhosa mother.

  8. SUPERFICIAL by Andy Cohen. The further adventures of the TV producer and personality.

  9. BORN TO RUN by Bruce Springsteen. The singer-songwriter’s autobiography.

  10. HAMILTON: THE REVOLUTION by Lin-Manuel Miranda and Jeremy McCarter. The libretto of the award-winning musical with backstage photos, a production history and interviews with the cast.

Paperback fiction

  1. 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.

  2. THE GIRL ON THE TRAIN by Paula Hawkins. A psychological thriller set in the environs of London is full of complications and betrayals.

  3. MILK AND HONEY by Rupi Kaur. A collection of poetry about love, loss, trauma and healing.

  4. MY GRANDMOTHER ASKED ME TO TELL YOU SHE’S SORRY by Fredrik Backman. A girl is instructed to deliver a series of letters after her grandmother dies.

  5. THE SELLOUT by Paul Beatty. A satire on race in America, addressing subjects such as slavery, police violence and segregation.

Paperback nonfiction

  1. THOMAS JEFFERSON AND THE TRIPOLI PIRATES by Brian Kilmeade and Don Yaeger. The war against the Barbary pirates in 1801.

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

  3. THE NEW JIM CROW by Michelle Alexander. A law professor on the war on drugs and its role in the disproportionate incarceration of black men.

  4. JUST MERCY by Bryan Stevenson. A law professor and MacArthur grant recipient’s memoir of his decades of work to free innocent people condemned to death.

  5. WE SHOULD ALL BE FEMINISTS by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. The adapted text of the much-watched TED talk.

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