Southern California Rankings:FICTION1. A MAN IN FULL...
- Share via
Southern California Rankings:
FICTION
1. A MAN IN FULL by Tom Wolfe (Farrar, Straus and Giroux: $28.95) The story of a real estate tycoon’s crash and burn and the sleaze who warm themselves by the fire.
Last Week: 1; Weeks on List: 4
2. MEMOIRS OF A GEISHA by Arthur Golden (Alfred A. Knopf: $25) The life and loves of a fisherman’s daughter who becomes a teahouse entertainer in Kyoto before and during WWII.
Last Week: 3; Weeks on List: 54
3. THE SIMPLE TRUTH by David Baldacci (Warner: $25) Twenty-five years ago, Rufus Harms was convicted of a murder he knows he committed. Suddenly, he’s not guilty, or is he?
Last Week: 14; Weeks on List: 2
4. THE POISONWOOD BIBLE by Barbara Kingsolver (HarperCollins: $27.50) An evangelical Baptist missionary takes his wife and children to the Belgian Congo in 1959.
Last Week: 2; Weeks on List: 8
5. THE HOURS by Michael Cunningham (Farrar, Straus and Giroux: $22) A novel built on Virginia Woolf’s novel, “Mrs. Dalloway”; like Woolf’s, a study of the female spirit.
Last Week: 9; Weeks on List: 2
6. CHARMING BILLY by Alice McDermott (Farrar, Straus and Giroux: $21) An Irish family reflects on the destructive, drink-spattered life of its deceased patriarch.
Last Week: --; Weeks on List: 9
7. ALL THROUGH THE NIGHT by Mary Higgins Clark (Simon and Schuster: $17) A Christmas suspense story, complete with abandoned baby and jewel thief.
Last Week: 8; Weeks on List: 6
8. THE VAMPIRE ARMAND by Anne Rice (Alfred A. Knopf: $26.95) Is Lestat dead? As vampires from around the globe gather near his body, Armand tells his own story.
Last Week: 4; Weeks on List: 7
9. WHEN THE WIND BLOWS by James Patterson (Little, Brown: $25) An astonishing discovery in the woods brings together a recently widowed veterinarian and a troubled FBI agent.
Last Week: 11; Weeks on List: 4
10. LINK by Walt Becker (William Morrow: $25) Paleoanthropologists find a connection between ancient artifacts and space visitors that threatens to destroy the world.
Last Week: --; Weeks on List: 2
11. RAINBOW SIX by Tom Clancy (Putnam: $27.95) Ex-Navy SEAL John Clark heads an international special operations anti-terrorist strike force.
Last Week: --; Weeks on List: 12
12. THE HAMMER OF EDEN by Ken Follett (Crown: $25.95) A young FBI agent must track down a terrorist group with the power to create earthquakes.
Last Week: 12; Weeks on List: 6
13. BAG OF BONES by Stephen King (Scribner: $27.50) A best-selling writer is haunted by writer’s block and ghosts at his Maine summer home.
Last Week: --; Weeks on List: 7
14. THE STARGAZEY by Martha Grimes (Henry Holt: $25) Sleuth Richard Jury probes a mysterious death linking the elegant Fulham Palace with an old English pub.
Last Week: 13; Weeks on List: 2
15. BREAKING NEWS by Robert MacNeil (Doubleday: $24.95) A novel of back-stabbing in the world of TV journalism, where ratings are more important than the news. -- 1
Last Week: --; Weeks on List: 1
****
NONFICTION
1. TUESDAYS WITH MORRIE by Mitch Albom (Doubleday: $19.95) A sportswriter’s empowering story about his weekly visits to see an older dying friend.
Last Week: 2; Weeks on List: 48
2. THE PROFESSOR AND THE MADMAN by Simon Winchester (HarperCollins: $22) The editor of the Oxford English Dictionary was helped by a brilliant mental patient.
Last Week: 4; Weeks on List: 11
3. CONVERSATIONS WITH GOD, BOOK THREE by Neale Donald Walsch (Hampton Roads: $22.95) Further dispatches on life and death dictated by the Man Upstairs.
Last Week: 1; Weeks on List: 4
4. CONVERSATIONS WITH GOD, BOOK ONE by Neale Donald Walsch (Putnam: $19.95) Channeling messages from Mr. Big about good, evil and the meaning of life.
Last Week: --; Weeks on List: 74
5. IF YOU’RE NOT OUT SELLING, YOU’RE BEING OUTSOLD by Michael St. Lawrence and Steven Johnson (Wiley: $22) Savvy tips and practical techniques for getting in touch with your inner salesman.
Last Week: --; Weeks on List: 8
6. SHAKESPEARE by Harold Bloom (Riverhead: $35) A hunt for the Bard’s personal life in the plays and how he “created” human nature with his unforgettable characters.
Last Week: --; Weeks on List: 1
7. BLIND MAN’S BLUFF by Sherry Sontag and Christopher Drew (PublicAffairs: $2 5) Revelations about the secret world of American submarine espionage.
Last Week: --; Weeks on List: 1
8. THE AMERICAN CENTURY by Harold Evans (Alfred A. Knopf: $60) A sweeping illustrated account of the rise of the United States to political and cultural dominance.
Last Week: --; Weeks on List: 1
9. THE NINE STEPS TO FINANCIAL FREEDOM by Suze Orman (Crown: $23) Practical tips for avoiding stress, making good savings plans and managing money.
Last Week: --; Weeks on List: 31
10. FOR LAUGHING OUT LOUD by Ed McMahon with David Fisher (Little, Brown: $23) Professional sidekick looks back at 50 years in and on television.
Last Week: --; Weeks on List: 3
11. LINDBERGH by A. Scott Berg (Putnam: $30) Courageous aviator, loving father, isolationist and, finally, fallen hero: a dramatic American story.
Last Week: 8; Weeks on List: 11
12. KING OF THE WORLD by David Remnick (Random House: $25) From Cassius Clay to Muhammad Ali: the story of the world’s greatest prizefighter.
Last Week: 12; Weeks on List: 3
13. KADDISH by Leon Wieseltier (Alfred A. Knopf: $27.50) A son’s reflection on the “mourner’s kaddish” he recites in the year after his father’s death.
Last Week: 11; Weeks on List: 7
14. FOR THE LOVE OF THE GAME by Michael Jordan (Crown: $50) An antidote to the NBA strike: a career retrospective--with 200 photos--from the Bulls star.
Last Week: 15; Weeks on List: 3
15. THE NUMBER DEVIL by Hans Magnus Enzensberger (Metropolitan Books: $22) A young boy visits the world of numbers--prime, infinite and otherwise.
Last Week: --; Weeks on List: 2
Paperbacks
FICTION
1. MIDWIVES by Chris Bohjalian (Vintage: $13) The moral dilemmas of a New England midwife.
2. SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST by Jonathan Kellerman (Bantam: $7.50) A killer murders in the name of science.
3. THE GOD OF SMALL THINGS by Arundhati Roy (HarperPerennial: $13) Rise and fall of an Indian family.
4. THE WINNER by David Baldacci (WarnerVision: $7.99) A man, a woman and a crooked lottery scheme.
5. DIVINE SECRETS OF THE YA-YA SISTERHOOD by Rebecca Wells (HarperPerennial: $13) Sisterhood in the South.
6. CAT & MOUSE y James Patterson (Warner: $7.99) On the trail of two psychopaths.
7. THE READER by Bernhard Schlink (Vintage: $11) A boyhood interlude with an older woman and its aftermath.
8. COLD MOUNTAIN by Charles Frazier (Vintage: $13) A Confederate soldier quits the Civil War.
9. CORELLI’S MANDOLIN by Louis De Bernieres (Vintage: $14) The Italian occupation of a Greek isle in World War II.
10. THE BEST AMERICAN SHORT STORIES 1998 edited by Garrison Keillor (Houghton Mifflin: $13) New and familiar voices.
****
NONFICTION
1. A CIVIL ACTION by Jonathan Harr (Vintage: $13) David vs. an industrial Goliath in a Massachusetts town.
2. INTO THIN AIR by Jon Krakauer (Anchor Books: $7.99) Risk and recklessness on a Mt. Everest expedition.
3. THE PERFECT STORM by Sebastian Junger (HarperPaperback: $13) Fisherman trapped in a storm.
4. THE MAN WHO ATE EVERYTHING by Jeffrey Steingarten (Vintage: $14) Eating his way across the globe.
5. THE SEAT OF THE SOUL by Gary Zukav (Fireside: $12) Insights into creating the spirituality of daily life.
6. HOLIDAYS ON ICE by David Sedaris (Little, Brown: $8.25) Department store Santas and other oddities.
7. THE MILLIONAIRE NEXT DOOR by Thomas J. Stanley and William D. Danko (Pocket: $14) Secrets of the wealthy.
8. THE VIRTUES OF AGING by Jimmy Carter (Ballantine: $9.95) Reasons why “the golden years” should be so golden.
9. CITIZEN SOLDIERS by Stephen Ambrose (Simon and Schuster: $16) America’s gutsy fighters in World War II.
10. THE WORLD ALMANAC AND BOOK OF FACTS, 1999 Edited by Robert Famighetti (World Almanac: $10.95) Data deluxe.
Rankings are based on a Times poll of Southland bookstores.
More to Read
Sign up for our Book Club newsletter
Get the latest news, events and more from the Los Angeles Times Book Club, and help us get L.A. reading and talking.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.