Best-sellers
Fiction
1. “You’ve Been Warned,” by James Patterson and Howard Roughan (Little, Brown, $27.99). An photographer working as a nanny and in love with the children’s father has terrible visions.
2. “A Thousand Splendid Suns,” by Khaled Hosseini (Riverhead, $25.95). A friendship between two women in Afghanistan against the backdrop of 30 years of war.
3. “Dead Heat,” by Dick Francis and Felix Francis (Putnam, $25.95). Someone is out to destroy a young chef’s New market restaurant, poisoning food and setting off a bomb.
4. “Making Money,” by Terry Pratchett (Harper, $25.95). In this Discworld fantasy, Moist von Lipwig takes over Ankh-Morpork’s Royal Mint.
5. “Pontoon,” by Garrison Keillor (Viking, $25.95). After the death of a good Lutheran lady in Lake Wobegon, her daughter learns about her secret life.
Nonfiction
1. “The Age of Turbulence,” by Alan Greenspan (Penguin Press, $35). A memoir by the longtime chairman of the Federal Reserve Board.
2. “If I Did It,” by the Goldman family (Beaufort, $24.95). O.J. Simpson’s “hypothetical” confession to the murder of his wife, Nicole, and Ron Goldman.
3. “Giving,” by Bill Clinton (Knopf, $24.95). The former president describes people and projects that save lives and solve problems around the world.
4. “Louder Than Words,” by Jenny McCarthy (Dutton, $23.95). A mother deals with her son’s autism and struggles to find treatment.
5. “The Nine,” by Jeffrey Toobin (Doubleday, $27.95). A portrait of the Supreme Court since the Reagan administration focuses on its moderates.






