FICTION Last week/Weeks on list
1. The Gift, 1 / 5
by Danielle Steel
2. The Celestine Prophecy, 2 /26
by James Redfield
3. The Chamber, 3 /12
by John Grisham
4. Politically Correct 4 /10
Bedtime Stories,
by James Finn Garner
5. The Bridges of Madison County, 5 /107
by Robert James Waller
6. Until You, 12/ 2
by Judith McNaught
7. Disney's The Lion King, 8 / 4
adapted by Don Ferguson
8. The Hidden City, - / 1
by Dvid Eddings
9. The Alienist, 6 /20
by Caleb Carr
10. Undue Influence, 9 / 5
by Steve Martini
11. Everything to Gain, 7 / 6
by Barbara Taylor Bradford
12. The Crossing, 10/10
by Cormac McCarthy
13. Dixie City Jam, 11/ 2
by James Lee Burke
14. The Seventh Gate, - / 1
by Margaret Weis
and Tracy Hickman
15. Remember Me, - /17
by Mary Higgins Clark
NONFICTION
1. Embraced by the Light, 1 /68
by Betty J. Eadie
with Curtis Taylor
2. Midnight in the Garden 3 /25
of Good and Evil,
by John Berendt
3. The Agenda, 2 /10
by Bob Woodward
4. The Book of Virtues, 4 /36
by William J. Bennett
5. Motherless Daughters, 5 / 5
by Hope Edelman
6. Moon Shot, 6 / 7
by Alan Shepard & Deke Slayton
with Jay Barbee
& Howard Benedict
7. October 1964, 10/ 2
by David Halberstam
8. The Catcher Was a Spy, 7 / 3
by Nicholas Dawidoff
9. The Tribe of Tiger, 12/3
by Elizabeth Marshall Thomas
10. The Kennedy Women, 15/ 2
by Laurence Leamer
11. Saved by the Light, 11/19
by Dannion Brinkley
with Paul Perry
12. Life of the Party, 8 /11
by Christopher Ogden
13. Gal: A True Life, 14/ 4
by Ruthie Bolton
ADVICE, HOW-TO AND MISCELLANEOUS
1. In the Kitchen with Rosie 1 /18
by Rosie Daley
2. Men Are From Mars, 2 /66
Women Are From Venus,
by John Gray
3. Magic Eye II, 3 /18
by N.E. Thing Enterprises
4. Magic Eye, 4 /32
by N.E. Thing Enterprises
These listings are based on computer-processed sales figures from 3,050 bookstores and from representative wholesalers with more than 28,000 retail outlets, including newsstands, variety stores, supermarkets and bookstores. The figures are statistically adjusted to represent sales in all such outlets across the United States. The number of titles within the two subdivisions of nonfiction can change from week to week, reflecting changes in book buying.
An (x) indicates that the listed book's sales, weighted to reflect the book-selling industry nationally, are barely distinguishable from those of the book above.