Best sellers
Fiction
1. “The Thirteenth Tale,” by Diane Setterfield (Atria, $26). A biographer struggles to discover the truth about an aging writer who has mythologized her past.
2. “The Book of Fate,” by Brad Meltzer (Warner, $25.99). The apparent murder of a presidential aide reveals Masonic secrets in Washington and a 200-year-old code invented by Thomas Jefferson.
3. “The Mission Song,” by John le Carre (Little, Brown, $26.99). An English translator, born in Congo, is sent by British intelligence to work for a corporate syndicate that wants to subvert Congolese elections.
4. “Rise and Shine,” by Anna Quindlen (Random House, $24.95). The lives of two sisters, one the host of a television show and the other a social worker.
5. “Judge & Jury,” by James Patterson and Andrew Gross (Little, Brown, $27.99). An aspiring actress and an FBI agent join forces against a powerful mobster.
Nonfiction
1. “I Feel Bad About My Neck,” by Nora Ephron (Knopf, $19.95). A witty look at aging from a novelist and screenwriter (“When Harry Met Sally”).
2. “The Greatest Story Ever Sold,” by Frank Rich (Penguin Press, $25.95). A Times columnist attacks the Bush administration’s approach to message management.
3. “The Confession,” by James E. McGreevey (Regan, $26.95). The former New Jersey governor comes out.
4. “Marley & Me,” by John Grogan (Morrow, $21.95). A newspaper columnist and his wife learn some life lessons from their neurotic dog.
5. “The World Is Flat,” by Thomas L. Friedman (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $27.50; updated and expanded edition, $30). A columnist for The New York Times analyzes 21st-century economics and foreign policy.
– The New York Times






