N.Y. TIMES BEST-SELLERS
FICTION
1. IT ENDS WITH US, by Colleen Hoover. A battered wife raised in a violent home attempts to halt the cycle of abuse.
Last week: 1 Weeks on list: 34
2. VERITY, by Colleen Hoover. Lowen Ashleigh is hired by the husband of an injured writer to complete her popular series and uncovers a horrifying truth.
Last week: 2 Weeks on list: 9
3. THE SEVEN HUSBANDS OF EVELYN HUGO,
by Taylor Jenkins Reid. A movie icon recounts stories of her loves and career to a struggling magazine writer.
Last week: 3 Weeks on list: 32
4. UGLY LOVE, by Colleen Hoover. Tate Collins and Miles Archer, an airline pilot, think they can handle a no strings attached arrangement. But they can’t.
Last week: 5 Weeks on list: 6
5. THE MAID, by Nita Prose. When a wealthy man is found dead in his room, a maid at the Regency Grand Hotel becomes a lead suspect.
Last week: 6 Weeks on list: 5
6. THE LINCOLN HIGHWAY, by Amor Towles. Two friends who escaped from a juvenile work farm take Emmett Watson on an unexpected journey to New York City in 1954.
Last week: 7 Weeks on list: 18
7. 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.
Last week: 8 Weeks on list: 53
8. BLACK CAKE, by Charmaine Wilkerson. Eleanor Bennett’s inheritance for her two children challenges what they knew about their lineage and identity.
Last week: — Weeks on list: 1
9. THE LOVE HYPOTHESIS,
by Ali Hazelwood. A young professor agrees to pretend to be a third-year Ph.D. candidate’s boyfriend.
Last week: 13 Weeks on list: 12
10. 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. 33Last week: 9 Weeks on list:
NONFICTION
1. RED-HANDED, by Peter Schweizer. The author of “Profiles in Corruption” portrays a conspiracy of how the Chinese government might infiltrate American institutions.
Last week: 1 Weeks on list: 2
2. THE 1619 PROJECT, edited by Nikole Hannah-Jones, Caitlin Roper, Ilena Silverman and Jake Silverstein. Viewing America’s entanglement with slavery and its legacy, in essays adapted and expanded from The New York Times Magazine.
Last week: 4 Weeks on list: 12
3. THE BODY KEEPS THE SCORE,
by Bessel van der Kolk. How trauma affects the body and mind, and innovative treatments for recovery.
Last week: 3 Weeks on list: 76
4. THE POWER OF REGRET,
by Daniel H. Pink. A look at four core regrets and potential strategies to make them a positive force.
Last week: — Weeks on list: 1
5. HOW TO BE PERFECT, by Michael Schur. The creator of “The Good Place” incorporates works by various philosophers to examine ethical questions and moral issues.
Last week: 2 Weeks on list: 2
6. CRYING IN H MART, by Michelle Zauner. The daughter of a Korean mother and Jewish American father, and leader of the indie rock project Japanese Breakfast, describes creating her own identity after losing her mother to cancer.
Last week: 9 Weeks on list: 19
7. UNTAMED, by Glennon Doyle. The activist and public speaker describes her journey of listening to her inner voice.
Last week: — Weeks on list: 84
8. DILLA TIME, by Dan Charnas. The life, work and cultural influence of the late hip-hop producer J Dilla.
Last week: — Weeks on list: 1
9. ENOUGH ALREADY, by Valerie Bertinelli. The actress and TV personality describes her personal setbacks and difficult journey to self-acceptance.
Last week: 5 Weeks on list: 3
10. THE BETRAYAL OF ANNE FRANK, by Rosemary Sullivan. New technology was used to investigate who revealed the location of Anne Frank and her family to the Nazis.
Last week: 7 Weeks on list: 3