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New York Times Hardcover Fiction Bestsellers
April 11, 2021

1. The Four Winds
by Kristin Hannah

As dust storms roll during the Great Depression, Elsa must choose between saving the family and farm or heading West.
2. The Midnight Library
by Matt Haig

Nora Seed finds a library beyond the edge of the universe that contains books with multiple possibilities of the lives one could have lived.
3. Win
by Harlan Coben

Windsor Horne Lockwood III might rectify cold cases connected to his family that have eluded the F.B.I. for decades.
4. Eternal
by Lisa Scottoline

Three people involved in a love triangle find everything they hold dear is tested as Mussolini's power grows and laws change in Rome.
5. Life After Death
by Sister Souljah

In a sequel to The Coldest Winter Ever, Winter Santiaga emerges after time served and seeks revenge.
6. The Consequences of Fear
by Jacqueline Winspear

The 16th book in the Maisie Dobbs series. As Nazi occupation increases, Maisie looks into a possible murder that might affect Britain's war efforts.
7. The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue
by V.E. Schwab

A Faustian bargain comes with a curse that affects the adventure Addie LaRue has across centuries.
8. The Bounty
by Janet Evanovich and Steve Hamilton

The seventh book in the Fox and O'Hare series. Kate and Nick seek help from their fathers as they go after a shadowy international organization in search of a lost train full of Nazi gold.
9. Klara and the Sun
by Kazuo Ishiguro

An "Artificial Friend" named Klara is purchased to serve as a companion to an ailing 14-year-old girl.
10. Dark Sky: A Joe Pickett Novel
by C.J. Box

The 21st book in the Joe Pickett series. The Wyoming game warden becomes a target when taking a tech baron on an elk hunting trip.
11. We Begin at the End
by Chris Whitaker

Trouble might start for the chief of police and a self-proclaimed outlaw teenager when a man is released from prison.
12. The Vanishing Half
by Brit Bennett

The lives of twin sisters who run away from a Southern Black community at age 16 diverge as one returns and the other takes on a different racial identity but their fates intertwine.
13. Double Jeopardy
by Stuart Woods

The 57th book in the Stone Barrington series. A double threat with friends in high places awaits Stone in Maine.
14. The Lost Apothecary
by Sarah Penner

An aspiring historian in London finds a clue that might put to rest unsolved apothecary murders from 200 years ago.
15. Where the Crawdads Sing
by Delia Owens

In a quiet town on the North Carolina coast in 1969, a young woman who survived alone in the marsh becomes a murder suspect.
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A version of this list appears in the April 11, 2021 issue of The New York Times Book Review. Rankings reflect sales for the week ending March 27, 2021.
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