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Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Best Sellers

June 19, 2011

Lists are published early on the Web. Learn More

Best Sellers Weekly Graphic: Hurricanes, Serial Killers, Murder and Nazis

Erik Larson, the author of “The Devil in the White City,” has had four books on the hardcover nonfiction list.


Inside the List

David Eagleman, who hits the hardcover nonfiction list this week with “Incognito,” is the kind of guy who really does make being a neuroscientist look like fun.

Browse Past Lists

This Week    Last Week E-Book Fiction Weeks
on List
1 SUMMER SECRETS, by Barbara Freethy. (Recorded Books.) Three sailboat-racing sisters close ranks against a tenacious reporter who digs into a devastating secret from their past. 1
2 4 THE HELP, by Kathryn Stockett. (Penguin Group.) A young white woman and two black maids in 1960s Mississippi. 19
3 2 SOMETHING BORROWED, by Emily Giffin. (St. Martin's.) A maid of honor to her charmed friend, Rachel White has always played the game by the rules. But that changes on her 30th birthday. 8
4 3 10TH ANNIVERSARY, by James Patterson and Maxine Paetro. (Little, Brown.) Detective Lindsay Boxer and the Women’s Murder Club race to find a missing baby. 5
5 5 BURIED PREY, by John Sandford. (Penguin Group.) The Minneapolis detective Lucas Davenport investigates the murders of two girls who were kidnapped in 1985 and whose bodies have just been found. 4
6 JUST LIKE HEAVEN, by Julia Quinn. (HarperCollins.) A Regency-era tale featuring the romantic exploits of the well-meaning but less-than-accomplished Smythe-Smith musicians. 1
7 7 SOMETHING BLUE, by Emily Giffin. (St. Martin's.) After being betrayed by her fiancé and her best friend, Darcy Rhone flees to London in an attempt to recreate her glamorous life on another continent. 7
8 8 A GAME OF THRONES, by George R. R. Martin. (Random House.) In the frozen wastes to the north of Winterfell, sinister and supernatural forces are mustering. 9
9 6 THE SIXTH MAN, by David Baldacci. (Grand Central.) The lawyer for an alleged serial killer is murdered, and the former Secret Service agents Sean King and Michelle Maxwell are on the case. 7
10 DREAMS OF JOY, by Lisa See. (Random House.) A young woman angry at her mother and aunt over family secrets runs away to Shanghai in search of her birth father. 1
11 MAGIC SLAYS, by Ilona Andrews. (Penguin Group.) Kate Daniels has quit the Order of Merciful Aid, but she’s still knee-deep in paranormal problems in Atlanta. 1
12 BEACH LANE, by Sherryl Woods. (Mira.) In the close-knit community of Chesapeake Shores, personal crises may keep Susie and Mack’s happily-ever-after just beyond reach. 1
13 LAIRD OF THE MIST, by Paula Quinn. (Grand Central.) A high-born woman discovers that her mysterious Highlander rescuer is her clan’s most hated enemy. 1
14 CREED'S HONOR, by Linda Lael Miller. (Harlequin.) Conner Creed, a hard-working rancher in Lonesome Bend, is reunited with the identical twin brother he’s been estranged from for years. 1
15 13 THE PARIS WIFE, by Paula McLain. (Random House.) Ernest Hemingway’s first wife, Hadley, narrates this novel set in Paris. 15
16 10 DEAD RECKONING, by Charlaine Harris. (Penguin Group.) The telepathic waitress Sookie Stackhouse seeks the culprit in a firebombing. 5
17 12 THE JEFFERSON KEY, by Steve Berry. (Random House.) The former government operative Cotton Malone foils an assassination attempt on the president and finds himself at dangerous odds with a secret society. 3
18 1 WATER FOR ELEPHANTS, by Sara Gruen. (Algonquin.) After his parents are killed in a car accident, a young veterinary student — and an elephant — save a Depression-era circus. 19
19 9 THE LINCOLN LAWYER, by Michael Connelly. (Little, Brown.) Routinely doing business from his Lincoln Town Cars, the bottom-feeding attorney Mickey Haller is asked to defend the scion of a wealthy family who might not be guilty of a murderous crime. 15
20 15 THE GIRL WHO KICKED THE HORNET’S NEST, by Stieg Larsson. (Knopf Doubleday.) In the third volume of the Millennium trilogy, the Swedish hacker Lisbeth Salander and the journalist Mikael Blomkvist confront a governmental adversary. 19
21 TRACE OF FEVER, by Lori Foster. (Harlequin.) The undercover mercenary Trace Rivers has his sights set on a corrupt businessman, but the businessman’s long-lost daughter has her own deadly plan for revenge. 1
22 11 THE FIFTH WITNESS, by Michael Connelly. (Little, Brown.) The defense lawyer Mickey Haller finds himself representing a woman facing home foreclosure who is accused of killing a banker. 9
23 16 A CLASH OF KINGS, by George R. R. Martin. (Random House.) From the citadel of Dragonstone to the shores of Winterfell, factions vie for control of a divided land: Book 2 of "A Song of Ice and Fire." 6
24 DON'T SAY A WORD, by Barbara Freethy. (Penguin Group.) A reckless photographer helps a woman delve into the mysteries of her past. 1
25 TRADER OF SECRETS, by Steve Martini. (HarperCollins.) The lawyer Paul Madriani pursues an assassin and two missing NASA scientists holding secrets. 1

Also Selling

  1. THE RELUCTANT VAMPIRE, by Lynsay Sands (HarperCollins)
  2. WINTER SEA, by Susanna Kearsley (Sourcebooks)
  3. KISS OF SNOW, by Nalini Singh (Penguin Group)
  4. A TURN IN THE ROAD, by Debbie Macomber (Harlequin)
  5. THE GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO, by Stieg Larsson (Knopf Doubleday)
  6. THE GIRL WHO PLAYED WITH FIRE, by Stieg Larsson (Knopf Doubleday)
  7. THE SNOWMAN, by Jo Nesbo (Knopf Doubleday)
  8. NO TIME LEFT, by David Baldacci (Grand Central)
  9. A STORM OF SWORDS, by George R. R. Martin (Random House)
  10. I'LL WALK ALONE, by Mary Higgins Clark (Simon & Schuster)
About the Best Sellers

These lists are an expanded version of those appearing in the June 19, 2011 print edition of the Book Review, reflecting sales for the week ending June 4, 2011.

Rankings reflect weekly sales for books sold in both print and electronic formats as reported by vendors offering a wide range of general interest titles. The sales venues for print books include independent book retailers; national, regional and local chains; online and multimedia entertainment retailers; university, gift, supermarket and discount department stores; and newsstands. E-book rankings reflect sales from leading online vendors of e-books in a variety of popular e-reader formats.

E-book sales are tracked for fiction and general nonfiction titles. E-book sales for advice & how-to books, children’s books and graphic books will be tracked at a future date. Titles are included regardless of whether they are published in both print and electronic formats or just one format. E-books available exclusively from a single vendor will be tracked at a future date.

The universe of print book dealers is well established, and sales of print titles are statistically weighted to represent all outlets nationwide. The universe of e-book publishers and vendors is rapidly emerging, and until the industry is settled sales of e-books will not be weighted.

Among the categories not actively tracked at this time are: perennial sellers, required classroom reading, textbooks, reference and test preparation guides, journals, workbooks, calorie counters, shopping guides, comics, crossword puzzles and self-published books.

The appearance of a ranked title reflects the fact that sales data from reporting vendors has been provided to The Times and has satisfied commonly accepted industry standards of universal identification (such as ISBN13 and EISBN13 codes). Publishers and vendors of all ranked titles conformed in timely fashion to The New York Times Best Seller Lists requirement to allow for independent corroboration of sales for that week.

Publisher credits for e-books are listed under the corporate publishing name instead of by publisher’s division.

Weekly sales of both print books and e-books are reported confidentially to The New York Times. The Best Seller Lists are prepared by the News Surveys and Election Analysis Department of The New York Times. Royalty Share, a firm that provides accounting services to publishers, is assisting The Times in its corroboration of e-book sales.

An asterisk (*) indicates that a book’s sales are barely distinguishable from those of the book above it. A dagger (†) indicates that some retailers report receiving bulk orders.

Click here for an explanation of the difference between trade and mass-market paperbacks.

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