Houston Chronicle Sunday

BESTSELLER­S

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Fiction

1. Billy Summers

by Stephen King. A killer for hire who takes out only bad guys seeks redemption as he does one final job.

2. 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.

3. We Were Never Here

by Andrea Bartz. Will the secrets Emily shares with Kristen about violent incidents in the past ruin her life?

4. The Paper Palace

by Miranda Cowley Heller. After an extramarit­al dalliance, Elle must choose between her husband and her childhood love.

5. Blind Tiger

by Sandra Brown. During Prohibitio­n, Thatcher Hutton and Laurel Plummer wind up on opposite sides of a moonshine war in Texas.

6. Not a Happy Family

by Shari Lapena. Questions arise when a rich couple are murdered after an Easter dinner with their three adult children.

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.

8. Malibu Rising

by Taylor Jenkins Reid. An epic party has serious outcomes for four famous siblings.

9. The Cellist

by Daniel Silva. The 21st book in the “Gabriel Allon” series. A private intelligen­ce service plans an act of violence that will aid Russia and divide America.

10. Black Ice

by Brad Thor. The 20th book in the “Scot Harvath” series. The American spy faces dangers in the Arctic Circle.

Nonfiction

1. American Marxism

by Mark R. Levin. The Fox News host gives his take on the Green New Deal, critical race theory and social activism.

2. Here, Right Matters

by Alexander Vindman. The retired Army lieutenant colonel recounts his actions that led to President Donald Trump’s impeachmen­t.

3. I Alone Can Fix It

by Carol Leonnig and Philip Rucker. The Pulitzer Prizewinni­ng reporters examine Trump’s final year in office, with a focus on the key players around him.

4. The Authoritar­ian Moment

by Ben Shapiro. The conservati­ve commentato­r describes what he perceives as threats to American business, education and politics.

5. How I Saved the World

by Jesse Watters. The Fox News host prescribes ways to defend against what he considers left-wing radicalism.

6. The Premonitio­n

by Michael Lewis. Stories of skeptics who went against the official response of the Trump administra­tion to the outbreak of COVID-19.

7. Greenlight­s

by Matthew McConaughe­y. The Academy Awardwinni­ng actor shares snippets from the diaries he kept over the past 35 years.

8. Killing the Mob

by Bill O’Reilly and Martin Dugard. The 10th book in the conservati­ve commentato­r’s “Killing” series looks at organized crime in the United States during the 20th century.

9. What Happened to You?

by Bruce D. Perry and Oprah Winfrey. An approach to dealing with trauma that shifts an essential question used to investigat­e it.

10. Untamed

by Glennon Doyle. The activist and public speaker describes her journey of listening to her inner voice.

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