1. Sooley
by John Grisham. Samuel Sooleymon receives a basketball scholarship in North Carolina and decides to bring his family from South Sudan ravaged by civil war.
2. The last thing he said to me
by Laura Dave. Hannah Hall uncovers truths about her missing husband and connections to her daughter from a previous relationship.
3.
Hail Mary project
by Andy Weir. Ryland Grace wakes up from a long sleep, alone and far from home, and the fate of humanity rests on his shoulders.
4.
While justice sleeps
by Stacey Abrams. When Judge Wynn falls into a coma, his legal assistant, Avery Keene, must uncover clues to a controversial case.
5.
21st birthday
by James Patterson and Maxine Paetro. The 21st book in the Women’s Murder Club series. New evidence is changing the case of a missing mother.
6. The hill we climb
by Amanda Gorman. The poem was read on President Joe Biden’s inauguration day, by the youngest poet to ever write and perform an inaugural poem.
7. The midnight library
by Matt Haig. Nora Seed finds a library beyond the edge of the universe that contains books with multiple possibilities of lives one could have lived.
8. This summer
by Jennifer Weiner. Daisy Shoemaker receives emails aimed at a woman leading a more glamorous life and discovers that there was more to this accident.
9. The four winds
by Kristin Hannah. As dust storms roll in during the Great Depression, Elsa must choose between saving the family and the farm or heading west.
10. A gamer
by David Baldacci. World War II veteran Aloysius Archer seeks an apprenticeship with private investigator Willie Dash in a corrupt California town.
1. The anthropocene reviewed
by John Green. A collection of personal essays that review different facets of the human-centered planet.
2. Zero failure
by Carol Leonnig. Three-time Pulitzer Prize winner sheds light on secrets, scandals and loopholes in the Secret Service.
3. Kill the mob
by Bill O’Reilly and Martin Dugard. The 10th book in the Conservative Commentator’s Killing series examines organized crime in the United States during the 20th century.
4. What happened to you?
by Bruce D. Perry and Oprah Winfrey. An approach to trauma treatment that shifts an essential question used to investigate it.
5. Noise
by Daniel Kahneman, Olivier Sibony and Cass R. Sunstein. This could lead to variability in the judgments that should be identical and the potential means of remedying them.
6. Directory
by Seth Rogen. A collection of personal essays from the actor, writer, producer, director, entrepreneur and philanthropist.
7. Green light
by Matthew McConaughey. The Oscar-winning actor shares excerpts from the diaries he has kept for the past 35 years.
8. Premonition
by Michael Lewis. Stories from skeptics who went against the Trump administration’s official response to the COVID-19 outbreak. The profiles include a local public health worker and a group of medics known as the Wolverines.
9. The Bomber Mafia
by Malcolm Gladwell. A look at the main players and the results of precision bombing during WWII.
10. wild
by Glennon Doyle. The activist and speaker describes her journey of listening to her inner voice.
New York Times