Best-sellers

Fiction

1. “Unaccustomed Earth,” by Jhumpa Lahiri (Knopf, $25). Stories about the anxiety and transformation experienced by Bengali parents and their American children.

2. “Small Favor,” by Jim Butcher (Roc, $23.95). Book 10 of the Dresden Files series about a wizard detective in Chicago.

3. “Compulsion,” by Jonathan Kellerman (Ballantine, $27). Several Los Angeles women are murdered, and the psychologist-detective Alex Delaware investigates.

4. “The Appeal,” by John Grisham (Doubleday, $27.95). Political and legal intrigue ensue when a Mississippi court decides against a chemical company.

5. “Belong to Me,” by Marisa de los Santos (Morrow, $24.95). When she moves to the suburbs, a woman becomes enmeshed in complications and secrets.

Nonfiction

1. “Mistaken Identity,” by Don and Susie Van Ryn and Newell, Colleen and Whitney Cerak, with Mark Tabb (Howard, $21.95). The families of two girls whose identities were confused after a 2006 accident describe their experience.

2. “Home,” by Julie Andrews (Hyperion, $26.95). A memoir of Andrews’s early years, from birth to being cast as Mary Poppins.

3. “Beautiful Boy,” by David Sheff (Houghton Mifflin, $24). A father struggles with his son’s meth addiction.

4. “Armageddon in Retrospect,” by Kurt Vonnegut (Putnam, $24.95). Twelve unpublished writings on war and peace by the late novelist.

5. “Vindicated,” by Jose Canseco (Simon Spotlight, $25.95). Canseco names steroid users in baseball and evaluates the Mitchell report.