Houston Chronicle Sunday

NONFICTION

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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. Finding Me

By Viola Davis. Actress describes the difficulti­es she encountere­d before claiming her sense of self and achieving profession­al success.

3. 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.

4. 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.

5. An Immense World

By Ed Yong. The science writer explains the sensory perception­s and ways of communicat­ion used by a variety of animals.

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.

7. Leadership

By Henry Kissinger. The former secretary of state profiles the statecraft strategies of Richard Nixon, Margaret Thatcher and others.

8. Why We Did It

By Tim Miller. The former Republican political operative assesses why some centrist conservati­ves fell under the sway of Donald Trump.

9. Invisible Storm

By Jason Kander. The former Army intelligen­ce officer and Kansas City mayoral candidate shares his struggles with posttrauma­tic stress disorder.

10. Greenlight­s

By Matthew McConaughe­y. Actor shares snippets from the diaries he kept over the last 35 years.

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