Best-Sellers

Fiction

1. “The Children of Hðrin,” by J. R. R. Tolkien (Houghton Mifflin, $26). In Middle-earth, an evil lord wants to destroy his rival’s children.

2. “The Woods,” by Harlan Coben (Dutton, $26.95). New evidence about a case of murder and disappearance at a summer camp 20 years earlier forces a county prosecutor to confront family secrets.

3. “I Heard that Song Before,” by Mary Higgins Clark (Simon & Schuster, $25.95). A woman marries a childhood acquaintance suspected of several murders.

4. “The Good Husband of Zebra Drive,” by Alexander McCall Smith (Pantheon, $21.95). The eighth novel in the No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency series.

5. “Nineteen Minutes,” by Jodi Picoult (Atria, $26.95). The aftermath of a high school shooting reveals the fault lines in a small New Hampshire town.

Nonfiction

1. “Einstein,” by Walter Isaacson (Simon & Schuster, $32). A biography based on newly released personal letters.

2. “Paula Deen: It Ain’t All About the Cookin’,” by Paula Deen with Sherry Suib Cohen (Simon & Schuster, $25). A memoir with recipes from the Southern cooking impresario (Food Network shows, restaurants, cookbooks, magazine).

3. “A Long Way Gone,” by Ishmael Beah (Sarah Crichton/ Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $22). A former child soldier from Sierra Leone describes his drug-crazed killing spree and his return to humanity.

4. “Where Have All the Leaders Gone?,” by Lee Iacocca (Scribner, $25). The former C.E.O. of Chrysler protests the lack of political and business leadership on issues like health care and energy policy.

5. “The Audacity of Hope,” by Barack Obama (Crown, $25). The Illinois junior senator proposes that Americans move beyond their political divisions.