|
NYT Fiction Bestsellers @ the LibraryJune 2020
|
While we remain closed, here are our NYT Fiction Bestsellers offered to you as eBooks– digital resources free to you. Holds are permitted. If you need help getting started or placing holds, email us at refdesk@beltiblibrary.org. Our Librarians will assist you 7 days a week.
|
|
|
Where the crawdads sing by Delia OwensViewed with suspicion in the aftermath of a tragedy, a beautiful hermit who has survived for years in a marsh becomes targeted by unthinkable forces - a first novel by the New York Times best-selling author of Cry of the Kalahari.
|
|
|
Camino winds by John GrishamThe best-selling author of Fair Warning presents a follow-up to Camino Island that finds novelist Mercer Mann’s continued efforts to find literary inspiration in the idyllic region complicated by mysterious intrigues.
|
|
|
If it bleeds by Stephen KingThe award-winning literary master presents a collection of four novella-length tales, complementing the title piece with the stories, "Mr. Harrigan’s Phone", "The Life of Chuck" and "Rat".
|
|
|
Walk the wire by David BaldacciThe best-selling author of The Fix presents a highly charged thriller in which fan-favorite character Amos Decker embarks on an action-packed investigation that is complicated by Baldacci’s signature twists and turns.
|
|
|
Big summerby Jennifer WeinerA woman confronts the dynamics of friendship and forgiveness while visiting Cape Cod to attend an old friend’s increasingly disastrous wedding - by the best-selling author of Good in Bed and Mrs. Everything.
|
|
|
The 20th victim by James PattersonInvestigating three simultaneous murders in Los Angeles, Chicago and San Francisco, SFPC sergeant Lindsay Boxer identifies an unsettling link between the victims before the killer’s escalating shootings galvanize the country.
|
|
|
American dirtby Jeanine CumminsSelling two favorite books to an unexpectedly erudite drug-cartel boss, a bookstore manager is forced to flee Mexico in the wake of her journalist husband’s tell-all profile and finds her family among thousands of migrants seeking hope in America.
|
|
|
Rodhamby Curtis SittenfeldA novel of what-might-have-been follows Hillary Rodham as she takes a different path, blazing her own trail — one that unfolds in public as well as in private — and one that crosses paths again and again with Bill Clinton.
|
|
|
The last trial by Scott TurowA brilliant octogenarian defense lawyer on the brink of retirement seeks to prove the innocence of a long-time friend, a former Nobel Prize winner who has been charged with murder - by the best-selling author of Presumed Innocent.
|
|
|
All adults here by Emma StraubA matriarch confronts the legacy of her parenting mistakes while her adult children navigate respective challenges in high standards and immaturity, before a teen granddaughter makes a courageous decision to tell the truth - by the best-selling author of Modern Lovers.
|
|
|
The book of longingsby Sue Monk KiddA first-century intellectual fights the limitations imposed on women before an encounter with an 18-year-old Jesus leads to their marriage, his dangerous public ministry and her flight to safety in Alexandria - by the author of The Invention of Wings.
|
|
|
The silent patient by Alex MichaelidesA therapist becomes dangerously obsessed with uncovering the truth about what prompted his client, an artist who refuses to speak, to murder her husband in a way that triggers mass public speculation.
|
|
|
Hello, summer
by Mary Kay Andrews
When the dream job she has pursued all her adult life suddenly disappears, an ambitious journalist returns to her family's small-town newspaper before witnessing a car accident that ends the life of a local war hero.
|
|
|
The giver of stars by Jojo MoyesVolunteering for Eleanor Roosevelt’s new traveling library in small-town Kentucky, an English bride joins a group of independent women whose commitment to their job transforms the community and their relationships - by the best-selling author of Me Before You.
|
|
|
|
|
|