Best-sellers

Fiction

  1. SLEEPING BEAUTIES by Stephen King and Owen King. In a small Appalachian town, women who fall asleep don’t wake up and become shrouded in mysterious cocoons while the men battle one another.

  2. DON’T LET GO by Harlan Coben. Detective Napoleon Dumas investigates a murder and uncovers clues about the disappearance of his high school love and the death of his twin brother 15 years ago.

  3. A COLUMN OF FIRE by Ken Follett. Lovers Ned Willard and Margery Fitzgerald find themselves on opposite sides of a conflict between English Catholics and Protestants while Queen Elizabeth fights to maintain her throne.

  4. THE CUBAN AFFAIR by Nelson DeMille. A Miami lawyer solicits an Army veteran to go on a secret mission to recover $60 million stashed away in Cuba.

  5. HAUNTED by James Patterson and James O. Born. A detective from New York takes his family on a vacation in Maine and is enlisted by local cops to help solve a crime in the woods.

  6. THE GIRL WHO TAKES AN EYE FOR AN EYE by David Lagercrantz. Lisbeth Salander teams up with an investigative journalist to uncover the secrets of her childhood. A continuation of Stieg Larsson’s Millennium series.

  7. TO BE WHERE YOU ARE by Jan Karon. The 14th novel in the Mitford series. Three generations of Kavanaghs face changes in their lives.

  8. A LEGACY OF SPIES by John le Carré. Peter Guillam, formerly of the British Secret Service, is pulled out of retirement to defend intelligence operations during the Cold War that resulted in the deaths of people close to him.

  9. ENEMY OF THE STATE by Kyle Mills. Vince Flynn’s character Mitch Rapp leaves the CIA to go on a manhunt when the nephew of a Saudi king finances a terrorist group.

  10. LITTLE FIRES EVERYWHERE by Celeste Ng. An artist with a mysterious past and a disregard for the status quo upends a quiet town outside Cleveland.

Nonfiction

  1. KILLING ENGLAND by Bill O’Reilly and Martin Dugard. Major events and battles during the Revolutionary War are told from the perspectives of George Washington, Benjamin Franklin and others.

  2. WHAT HAPPENED by Hillary Rodham Clinton. The first woman nominated for president by a major political party details her campaign, mistakes she made, outside forces that affected the outcome and how she recovered in its aftermath.

  3. UNBELIEVABLE by Katy Tur. The NBC News correspondent describes her work covering the 2016 campaign of the Republican nominee for president and his behavior toward her.

  4. ASTROPHYSICS FOR PEOPLE IN A HURRY by Neil deGrasse Tyson. A straightforward, easy-to-understand introduction to the universe.

  5. HIT REFRESH by Satya Nadella with Greg Shaw and Jill Tracie Nichols. Microsoft’s chief executive discusses changes at the company, advancements in technology and the importance of empathy.

  6. THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF GUCCI MANE by Gucci Mane with Neil Martinez-Belkin. A memoir by the East Atlanta hip-hop artist, who made a comeback.

  7. THE PARADIGM by Jonathan Cahn. Ancient figures from the Middle East are used to explain the rise and fall of contemporary leaders and events.

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

  9. THE VIETNAM WAR by Geoffrey C. Ward. A companion to the PBS series by Ken Burns and Lynn Novick that looks at the events and the legacy of the war.

  10. AL FRANKEN, GIANT OF THE SENATE by Al Franken. A memoir by the Democratic senator from Minnesota and former Saturday Night Live writer.

Paperback fiction

  1. IT by Stephen King.

  2. MILK AND HONEY by Rupi Kaur.

  3. THE HANDMAID’S TALE by Margaret Atwood.

  4. THE WOMAN IN CABIN 10 by Ruth Ware.

  5. ADULTOLESCENCE by Gabbie Hanna.

Paperback nonfiction

  1. THE GLASS CASTLE by Jeannette Walls.

  2. BEING MORTAL by Atul Gawande.

  3. ON TYRANNY by Timothy Snyder.

  4. THE LOST CITY OF THE MONKEY GOD by Douglas Preston.

  5. JUST MERCY by Bryan Stevenson.

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