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New York Times Hardcover Fiction Bestsellers January 24, 2021
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| 2. Neighbors by Danielle SteelA Hollywood recluse's perspective changes when she invites her neighbors into her mansion after an earthquake. |
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| 3. The Vanishing Half by Brit BennettThe lives of twin sisters who run away from a Southern Black community at age 16 diverge as one returns and the other takes on a different racial identity but their fates intertwine. |
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| 4. The Wife Upstairs by Rachel HawkinsA recently arrived dog walker in a Southern gated community falls for a mysterious widower. |
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| 5. 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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| 6. Outlawed by Anna NorthAda, who apprentices midwifery under her mother, must decide whether to aid a bank of outlaws who want to create a safe haven for outcast women. |
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| 7. The Return by Nicholas SparksA doctor serving in the Navy in Afghanistan goes back to North Carolina where two women change his life. |
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| 8. The Prophets by Robert Jones Jr.When an older slave begins preaching on a Southern plantation, the love between two slaves, Isaiah and Samuel, is seen in a different light. |
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| 9. A Time for Mercy by John GrishamThe third book in the Jake Brigance series. A 16-year-old is accused of killing a deputy in Clanton, Miss., in 1990. |
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| 10. Anxious People by Fredrik BackmanA failed bank robber holds a group of strangers hostage at an apartment open house. |
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| 11. Ready Player Two by Ernest ClineIn a sequel to Ready Player One, Wade Watts discovers a technological advancement and goes on a new quest. |
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| 13. The Midnight Library by Matt HaigNora Seed finds a library beyond the edge of the universe that contains books with multiple possibilities of the lives one could have lived. |
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| 14. The Push by Ashley AudrainA devastating event forces a mother who questions her child's behavior and her own sanity to confront the truth. |
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| 15. Black Buck by Mateo AskaripourThe only Black person at a tech startup determines to get other young people of color into America's sales force. |
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Byron Public Library District 100 S. Washington St. Byron, IL 61010 (815) 234-5107
byron.lib.il.us
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