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New York Times Hardcover Fiction Bestsellers January 30, 2022
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| 1. To Paradise by Hanya YanagiharaDifficult circumstances and societal pressures affect characters living in America in 1893, 1993 and 2093. |
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| 2. The Maid by Nita ProseWhen a wealthy man is found dead in his room, a maid at the Regency Grand Hotel becomes a lead suspect. |
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| 3. Something to Hide by Elizabeth GeorgeThe 21st book in the Inspector Lynley series. Lynley pursues a killer who might be hiding in North London's Nigerian community. |
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| 4. The Horsewoman by James Patterson and Mike LupicaAs the Paris Olympics draw near, a mother and daughter, who are champion horse riders, compete against each other. |
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| 5. The Lincoln Highway by Amor TowlesTwo friends who escaped from a juvenile work farm take Emmett Watson on an unexpected journey to New York City in 1954. |
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| 6. The Last Thing He Told Me by Laura DaveHannah Hall discovers truths about her missing husband and bonds with his daughter from a previous relationship. |
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| 7. The Midnight Library by Matt HaigNora Seed finds a library beyond the edge of the universe that contains books with multiple possibilities of the lives one could have lived. |
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| 8. The Judge's List by John GrishamThe second book in the Whistler series. Investigator Lacy Stoltz goes after a serial killer and closes in on a sitting judge. |
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| 9. A Flicker in the Dark by Stacy WillinghamWhen teenage girls go missing, a psychologist in Baton Rough grapples with echoes from her past. |
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| 10. Wish You Were Here by Jodi PicoultDiana O'Toole re-evaluates her seemingly perfect life when a pandemic disrupts her vacation in the Galapagos Islands. |
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| 11. Invisible by Danielle SteelThe daughter of a couple in a loveless marriage is discovered by a British filmmaker and thrust into the public eye. |
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| 13. Call Us What We Carry: Poems by Amanda GormanA debut collection of poems on identity and history by the presidential inaugural poet who wrote The Hill We Climb. |
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| 14. Cloud Cuckoo Land by Anthony DoerrAn interconnected cast of dreamers and outsiders are in dangerous and disparate settings past, present and future. |
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| 15. Olga Dies Dreaming by Xochitl GonzalezAfter a devastating hurricane hits Puerto Rico, Olga is visited in New York by her mother, who abandoned her as a child to advance a militant political cause. |
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Atlantic County Library System | 40 Farragut Avenue, Mays Landing, NJ 08330 Phone: (609) 625-2776 | www.atlanticlibrary.org
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|  | Atlantic County Executive Dennis Levinson Atlantic County Board of Commissioners, Maureen Kern, Chairwoman |
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