San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

BESTSELLER­S

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Fiction

1. Ocean Prey

by John Sandford. The 31st book in the “Prey” series. When federal officers are killed, Lucas Davenport and Virgil Flowers team up to investigat­e matters.

2. The Hill We Climb

by Amanda Gorman. The poem read on President Joe Biden’s Inaugurati­on Day, by the youngest poet to write and perform an inaugural poem.

3. The Devil’s Hand

by Jack Carr. The fourth book in the “Terminal List” series. James Reece is given a top-secret CIA mission.

4. The Four Winds

by Kristin Hannah. As dust storms roll during the Great Depression, Elsa must choose between saving the family and farm or heading West.

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 Red Book

by James Patterson and David Ellis. The second book in the “Black Book” thriller series. Chicago detective Billy Harney investigat­es his own past.

7. The Good Sister

by Sally Hepworth. Past secrets come up when Fern decides to pay back her twin sister, Rose, by having a baby for her.

8. The Invisible Life of Addie Larue

by V.E. Schwab. A Faustian bargain comes with a curse that affects the adventure Addie LaRue has across centuries.

9. Win

by Harlan Coben. Windsor Horne Lockwood III might rectify cold cases connected to his family that have eluded the FBI for decades.

10. Stargazer

by Anne Hillerman. Can Leaphorn give Chee and Manuelito the guidance they need to find the justice they seek?

Nonfiction 1. On the House

by John Boehner. The former speaker of the House reflects on his time in Washington, key political figures and the current state of the Republican Party.

2. The Code Breaker

by Walter Isaacson. How Nobel Prize winner Jennifer Doudna and her colleagues invented CRISPR, a tool that can edit DNA.

3. Broken Horses

by Brandi Carlile. The sixtime Grammy Awardwinni­ng singer and songwriter recounts difficulti­es during her formative years and her hard-won successes.

4. Empire of Pain

by Patrick Radden Keefe. A portrait of the Sackler family, known for their philanthro­py toward injournali­st stitutions around the world and their involvemen­t with Valium and OxyContin.

5. Greenlight­s

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

6. Caste

by Isabel Wilkerson. The Pulitzer Prize-winning examines aspects of caste systems across civilizati­ons and reveals a rigid hierarchy in America today.

7. Untamed

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

8. Broken

by Jenny Lawson. The humorist maps out her mental and physical health journey.

9. Finding Freedom

by Erin French. A memoir by the chef and owner of the Lost Kitchen in Freedom, Maine.

10. Think Again

by Adam Grant. An examinatio­n of the cognitive skills of rethinking and unlearning that could be used to adapt to a rapidly changing world.

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