BEST-SELLERS

Fiction

  1. THE CAST by Danielle Steel. A magazine columnist meets an array of Hollywood professionals when a producer turns a story about her grandmother into a TV series.

  2. THE 17TH SUSPECT by James Patterson and Maxine Paetro. The latest installment in the Women’s Murder Club series. Detective Lindsay Boxer searches for a killer in San Francisco.

  3. THE FALLEN by David Baldacci. Amos Decker, known as the Memory Man, puts his talents toward solving a string of murders in a Rust Belt town.

  4. BY INVITATION ONLY by Dorothea Benton. Two families are brought together when the daughter of a Chicago power broker and the son of a Southern peach farmer decide to wed.

  5. THE HIGH TIDE CLUB by Mary Kay Andrews. An eccentric millionaire enlists attorney Brooke Trappnell to fix old wrongs, which sets up a potential scandal and murder.

  6. TWISTED PREY by John Sandford. The 28th book in the Prey series. A federal marshal looks into the actions of a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee.

  7. BEFORE WE WERE YOURS by Lisa Win-gate. A South Carolina lawyer learns about the questionable practices of a Tennessee orphanage.

  8. LITTLE FIRES EVERYWHERE by Celeste Ng. An artist upends a quiet suburb outside Cleveland.

  9. WARLIGHT by Michael Ondaatje. In Britain after World War II, a pair of teenage siblings are taken under the tutelage of a mysterious man and his cronies who served during the war.

  10. THE CROOKED STAIRCASE by Dean Koontz. Rogue FBI agent Jane Hawk is on the lam from the government and a secret group causing a rash of murder-suicides.

Nonfiction

  1. HOW TO CHANGE YOUR MIND by Michael Pollan. A personal account of how psychedelics might help the mentally ill and people dealing with everyday challenges.

  2. THE SOUL OF AMERICA by Jon Meacham. The Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer contextualizes the present political climate through the lens of difficult moments in American history.

  3. A HIGHER LOYALTY by James Comey. The former FBI director recounts cases and personal events that shaped his outlook on justice, and analyzes the leadership styles of three presidents.

  4. BARRACOON by Zora Neale Hurston. A previously unpublished first-person account of Cudjo Lewis, a man who was transported and enslaved 50 years after the slave trade was banned.

  5. THREE DAYS IN MOSCOW by Bret Baier and Catherine Whitney. The Fox News anchor describes Ronald Reagan’s 1988 visit to the Soviet capital.

  6. I’LL BE GONE IN THE DARK by Michelle McNamara. The late true-crime journalist’s search for the serial murderer and rapist known as the Golden State Killer.

  7. ROBIN by Dave Itzkoff. A New York Times journalist details the career and struggles of actor and comedian Robin Williams.

  8. EDUCATED by Tara Westover. The daughter of survivalists, who is kept out of school, educates herself enough to leave home for university.

  9. WAR ON PEACE by Ronan Farrow. The Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist chronicles the deterioration of American diplomacy.

  10. I LOVE CAPITALISM! by Ken Langone. A memoir by a co-founder of Home Depot and a former director of the New York Stock Exchange.

Paperback fiction

  1. INTO THE WATER by Paula Hawkins.

  2. THE HANDMAID’S TALE by Margaret Atwood.

  3. MILK AND HONEY by Rupi Kaur.

  4. THE SUN AND HER FLOWERS by Rupi Kaur.

  5. CRAZY RICH ASIANS by Kevin Kwan.

Paperback nonfiction

  1. SAPIENS by Yuval Noah Harari.

  2. KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON by David Grann.

  3. HILLBILLY ELEGY by J. D. Vance.

  4. SHOE DOG by Phil Knight.

  5. THE COLOR OF LAW by Richard Rothstein.

Upcoming Events