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New York Times Hardcover Fiction Bestsellers January 26, 2020
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| 1. Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia OwensIn a quiet town on the North Carolina coast in 1969, a young woman who survived alone in the marsh becomes a murder suspect. |
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| 2. Dear Edward by Ann NapolitanoA 12-year-old boy tries to start over after becoming the sole survivor of a plane crash in which he lost his immediate family. |
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| 3. Moral Compass by Danielle SteelShortly after Saint Ambrose Prep goes co-ed, a student is attacked and the community falls apart. |
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| 4. Such a Fun Age by Kiley ReidTumult ensues when Alix Chamberlain's babysitter is mistakenly accused of kidnapping her charge. |
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| 5. The Guardians by John GrishamCullen Post, a lawyer and Episcopal minister, antagonizes some ruthless killers when he takes on a wrongful conviction case. |
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| 6. Long Bright River by Liz MooreMickey risks her job with the Philadelphia police force by going after a murderer and searching for her missing sister. |
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| 7. The Silent Patient by Alex MichaelidesTheo Faber looks into the mystery of a famous painter who stops speaking after shooting her husband. |
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| 8.The Dutch House by Ann PatchettA sibling relationship is impacted when the family goes from poverty to wealth and back again over the course of many decades. |
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| 9. The Giver of Stars by Jojo MoyesIn Depression-era Kentucky, five women refuse to be cowed by men or convention as they deliver books. |
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| 10. Treason by Stuart WoodsThe 52nd book in the Stone Barrington series. Stone is asked to expose a double agent in the State Department. |
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| 11. The Institute by Stephen KingChildren with special talents are abducted and sequestered in an institution where the sinister staff seeks to extract their gifts through harsh methods. |
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| 12. Criss Cross by James PattersonThe 27th book in the Alex Cross series. Copycat crimes make the detective question whether an innocent man was executed. |
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| 14. A Minute to Midnight by David BaldacciWhen Atlee Pine returns to her hometown to investigate her sister's kidnapping from 30 years ago, she winds up tracking a potential serial killer. |
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| 15. Olive, Again by Elizabeth StroutIn a follow-up to the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel Olive Kitteridge, new relationships, including a second marriage, are encountered in a seaside town in Maine. |
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Thank you for subscribing to Houston Public Library's weekly "New York Times Fiction Bestsellers" newsletter. Due to high demand or publication date, some titles featured on this newsletter may not be immediately available in the Library’s catalog. We apologize for the inconvenience. Please check for these titles of interest at a later time.
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