San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

BESTSELLER­S

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FICTION

1. The Hotel Nantucket

By Elin Hilderbran­d. The new general manager of a hotel, far from its Gilded Age heyday, deals with the complicate­d pasts of her guests and staff.

2. Sparring Partners

By John Grisham. Three novellas: “Homecoming,” “Strawberry Moon” and “Sparring Partners.”

3. Horse

By Geraldine Brooks. The story of a racehorse, an enslaved groom and an itinerant painter reverberat­es in three different eras.

4. Meant to Be

By Emily Giffin. Joe, the disappoint­ing scion of a family considered American royalty, and Cate, a budding model seeking to escape her surroundin­gs, find each other.

5. 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.

6. The Last Thing He Told Me

By Laura Dave. Hannah Hall discovers truths about her missing husband and bonds with his daughter from a previous relationsh­ip.

7. Tom Clancy: Zero Hour

By Don Bentley. Jack Ryan Jr. appears to be the only person who can stop a second Korean war.

8. Run, Rose, Run

By Dolly Parton and James Patterson. A singer-songwriter goes to Nashville seeking stardom but is followed by her dark past.

9. Dream Town

By David Baldacci. The third book in the “Archer” series. Archer, Dash and Callahan search for a missing screenwrit­er who had a dead body turn up in her home.

10. The Summer Place

By Jennifer Weiner. A wedding between Ruby Danhauser and her pandemic boyfriend at a family beach house in Cape Cod brings to light family secrets.

NONFICTION

1. Battle for the American Mind

By Pete Hegseth with David Goodwin. The “Fox & Friends Weekend” host makes his case for what he calls classical Christian education.

2. I’d Like to Play Alone, Please

By Tom Segura. The stand-up comedian and podcaster shares stories of parenting and strange encounters.

3. Killing the Killers

By Bill O’Reilly and Martin Dugard. The 11th book in the conservati­ve commentato­r’s “Killing” series gives an account of the global war against terrorists.

4. James Patterson

By James Patterson. The author’s life, from growing up in small-town New York to working in the advertisin­g industry to becoming a successful storytelle­r.

5. Happy-Go-Lucky

By David Sedaris. The humorist portrays personal and public upheavals of his life in its seventh decade and the world in the time of a pandemic.

6. Finding Me

By Viola Davis. The multiple award-winning actress describes the difficulti­es she encountere­d before claiming her sense of self and achieving profession­al success.

7. River of the Gods

By Candice Millard. The story of the hardships encountere­d during 19th-century expedition­s in Africa, and the complicate­d partnershi­ps behind them.

8. Rough Draft

By Katy Tur. The MSNBC anchor describes growing up with her helicopter journalist parents and her own journey in covering the news. 9. How to Raise an Antiracist

By Ibram X. Kendi. The ways in which children at different ages experience race and how racist structures might impact them.

10. Phil

By Alan Shipnuck. An unauthoriz­ed biography of golf champion Phil Mickelson.

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