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The following list ranks the number-one best-selling fiction books, in the combined print and e-books category. The most frequent weekly best seller of the year was It Starts with Us by Colleen Hoover with 10 weeks at the top of the list, followed closely by Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros with 9 weeks. For a second consecutive year, Colleen ...
Good evening, Clarice. Before it was a pee-your-pants scary movie with an all-star cast of Anthony Hopkins and Jodie Foster, The Silence of the Lambs was an equally terrifying novel. First ...
Whalefall received generally positive reviews and was included in a list of the "Best Thrillers of 2023" by the New York Times. [2] Sarah Lyall of the New York Times described the book as a "crazily enjoyable, beat-the-clock adventure story about fathers, sons, guilt and the mysteries of the sea," and compared the book to the survival film 127 Hours. [3]
The Nigerwife is a 2023 novel by British writer Vanessa Walters. [1] It was published on 2 May 2023 by Atria Books . The book centers on a young woman who goes missing in Lagos, Nigeria, and her estranged auntie who will stop at nothing to find the truth.
These books comprise the top spots on the USA TODAY Best-seller List for the week of Dec. 18. 1. “Dog Man: Big Jim Begins” by Dav Pilkey ... In this 2023 picture book, the Pigeon made a list ...
From 'Gone Girl' and 'Big Little Lies' to 'The Silence of the Lambs' and 'Misery,' here are the 30 best thriller books to add to your TBR list.
2023 literary award winners, sorted alphabetically by award Award Category Author Title Ref. Amazon.ca First Novel Award: Jasmine Sealy: The Island of Forgetting [248] Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award: Laurie Halse Anderson [249] Andrew Carnegie Medals for Excellence: Fiction Julie Otsuka: The Swimmers [250] Nonfiction Ed Yong: An Immense World [250]
[1] According to the Los Angeles Times, "Not only is [the novel] set in 19th century England with a sprawling cast of characters high and low, but Charles Dickens himself makes an appearance, charming everyone except those who envy his success. But there's more to this brilliant new entry in Smith's catalog than a simple literary romp."