The Commercial Appeal

NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER­S

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1. by James Patterson and Maxine Paetro (Little, Brown). The latest installmen­t in the Women’s Murder Club series. Detective Lindsay Boxer searches for a killer in San Francisco. 2. by David Baldacci (Grand Central). Amos Decker, known as the Memory Man, puts his talents toward solving murders in a Rust Belt town. 3. by John Sandford (Putnam). The 28th book in the Prey series. A federal marshal looks into the actions of a member of the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee. 4. by Rachel Kushner (Scribner). A woman is separated from her son when she begins two consecutiv­e life sentences in a California correction­al facility. 5. by Aimee Molloy (Harper). A missing baby unnerves a group of new mothers who meet in Prospect Park twice a week. 6. by Richard Paul Evans (Simon & Schuster). The second book in the Broken Road series. After surviving a plane crash, a man decides to walk the length of Route 66. 7. by Chuck Palahniuk (Norton). Young men take on geriatric politician­s who are pushing the country toward a third world war. 8. by Lisa Wingate (Ballantine). A South Carolina lawyer learns about the questionab­le practices of a Tennessee orphanage. 9. by Celeste Ng (Penguin Press). An artist upends a quiet town outside Cleveland. 10. by Jake Tapper (Little, Brown). Charlie Marder, a World War II veteran and unlikely congressma­n, gets entangled in a dangerous series of events in 1950s D.C.

Hardback nonfiction

1. by James Comey (Flatiron). The former F.B.I. director recounts cases and personal events that shaped his outlook on justice, and analyzes the leadership styles of three presidents. 2. by Michelle McNamara (Harper). The late true-crime journalist’s search for “the Golden State Killer.” 3. by Ronan Farrow (Norton). The Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist chronicles the deteriorat­ion of American diplomacy. 4. by Madeleine Albright with Bill Woodward (Harper). The former secretary of state examines the legacy of fascism in the 20th century and its potential revival. 5. by Tara Westover (Random House). Daughter of survivalis­ts, who is kept out of school, educates herself enough to go to university. 6. by Neil deGrasse Tyson (Norton). A straightfo­rward, easy-toundersta­nd introducti­on to the universe. 7. by Ainsley Earhardt with Mark Tabb (Harper). A memoir by one of the hosts of “Fox & Friends.” 8. by Michael V. Hayden (Penguin Press). A former director of the N.S.A. and the C.I.A. identifies domestic and internatio­nal threats to the American intelligen­ce community. 9. by Pete Souza (Little, Brown). More than 300 pictures of the former president. 10. by Jonah Goldberg (Crown Forum). A senior editor at National Review assesses issues plaguing the left and the right.

Hardback miscellane­ous

3. 4. (Northfield). 5. Nelson). by Joanna Gaines with Marah 2. by Mark Manson (HarperOne/HarperColl­ins). How to stop trying to be “positive” all the time and, instead, become better at handling adversity.

1. Stets (Morrow).

by Jen Sincero (Running Press).

Paperback fiction

by Gary Chapman by Rachel Hollis (Thomas 1. by Paula Hawkins (Riverhead). In this psychologi­cal thriller by the author of “The Girl on the Train,” women are found drowned in a river in a small English town. 2. by Margaret Atwood (Anchor). In the Republic of Gilead’s dystopian future, men and women perform the services assigned to them. The basis of the Hulu series. 3. by Rupi Kaur (Andrews McMeel). A new collection of poetry from the author of “Milk and Honey.” 4. by Nora Roberts (St. Martin’s Griffin). A Montana family is tested when a relative is found beaten and another woman is murdered. 5. by Rupi Kaur (Andrews McMeel) A collection of poetry about love, loss and healing. 6. by Ernest Cline (Broadway). It’s 2044, life on a resource-depleted Earth has grown increasing­ly grim, and the key to a vast fortune is hidden in a virtual-reality world.

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