FICTION Last week/Weeks on list
1. Cell, 1/3
by Stephen King
2. The Da Vinci Code, 2/151
by Dan Brown (illustrated edition)
3. Memory in Death, 3/3
by J.D. Robb
4. Sea Change, 4/1
by Robert B. Parker
5. The Last Templar, 5/4
by Raymond Khoury
6. Lovers and Players, 6/1
by Jackie Collins
7. Gone, 7/2
by Lisa Gardner
8. The Hostage, 8/6
by W.E.B. Griffin
9. Outbound Flight, 9/2
by Timothy Zahn
10. The Hunt Club, 10/3
by John Lescroart
NONFICTION
1. Marley and Me, 1/17
by John Grogan
2. The World is Flat, 2/45
by Thomas Friedman
3. Freakonomics, 3/44
by Steven Levitt & Stephen Dubner
4. The Year of Magical Thinking, 4/19
by Joan Didion
5. My Friend Leonard, 5/19
by James Frey
6. Manhunt, 6/1
by James L. Swanson
7. You're wearing that? 7/3
by Deborah Tannen
8. For Laci, 5/6
by Sharon Rocha
9. Blink, 9/54
by Malcolm Gladwell
10. Our Endangered Values, 10/15
by Jimmy Carter
ADVICE, HOW-TO
AND MISCELLANEOUS
1. The Purpose-Driven Life, 1/161
by Rick Warren
2. Natural Cures "They" Don't
Want you to Know About, 2/32
by Kevin Trudeau
3. If You Could See What I See, 3/2
by Sylvia Browne
4. Your Best Life Now, 4/68
by Joel Osteen
5. You: The Owner's Manual, 5/28
by Michael F. Roizen
and Mehmet C. Oz
PAPERBACK FICTION
1. The Closers, 1/2
by Michael Connelly
2. The Broker, 2/12
by John Gresham
3. Impossible, 3/2
by Danielle Steel
4. Cordina's Royal Family:
Gabriella and Alexander, 4/2
by Nora Roberts
5. Memoirs of a Geisha, 5/56
by Arthur Golden
PAPERBACK NONFICTION
1. Night, 1/4
by Elie Wiesel
2. A Million Little Pieces, 2/21
by James Frey
3. The Glass Castle, 3/5
by Jeannette Walls
4. In Cold Blood, 4/52
by Truman Capote
5. The Tipping Point, 5/79
by Malcolm Gladwell
PAPERBACK ADVICE, HOW-TO
AND MISCELLANEOUS
1. 365: No Repeats, 1/15
by Rachel Ray
2. The Biggest Loser, 2/8
by Maggie Greenwood
3. What to Expect When You're Expecting, 3/252
by Heidi Murkoff, Arlene Eisenberg and Sandee Hathaway
4. The South Beach Diet, 4/37
by Arthur Agatston
5. Rich Dad, Poor Dad, 5/266
by Robert T. Kiyosaki
Rankings reflect sales figures at almost 4,000 bookstores plus wholesalers serving 50,000 other retailers (gift shops, department stores, newsstands, supermarkets), statistically weighted to represent sales in all such outlets nationwide. An (x) indicates that a book's sales are barely distinguishable from those of the book above.