Best-selling books
Fiction
1. “The Da Vinci Code”
Dan Brown (Doubleday, $24.95)
2. “Prior Bad Acts”
Tami Hoag (Bantam, $26)
3. “The 5th Horseman”
James Patterson and Maxine Paetro (Little, Brown, $27.95)
4. “The Tenth Circle”
Jodi Picoult (Atria, $26)
5. “The House
Danielle Steel (Delacorte, $27)
6. “Dirty Blonde”
Lisa Scottoline (HarperCollins, $25.95)
7. “The Templar Legacy”
Steve Berry (Ballantine, $24.95)
8. “The Secret Supper”
Javier Sierra (Atria, $25.95)
9. “A Dirty Job”
Christopher Moore (Morrow, $24.95)
10. “Cell”
Stephen King (Scribner, $26.95)
Nonfiction
1. “Marley & Me”
John Grogan (Morrow, $21.95)
2. “American Theocracy”
Kevin Phillips (Viking, $26.95)
3. “Game of Shadows”
Mark Fainaru-Wada and Lance Williams (Gotham, $26)
4. “Cobra II”
Michael R. Gordon and Bernard E. Trainor (Pantheon, $27.95)
5. “The World is Flat”
Thomas L. Friedman (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $27.50)
6. “Freakonomics”
Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner (Morrow, $25.95)
7. “Misquoting Jesus”
Bart D. Ehrman (Harper-SanFrancisco, $24.95)
8. “Left to Tell”
Immaculée Ilibagiza with Steve Erwin (Hay House, $24.95)
9. “Blink”
Malcolm Gladwell (Little, Brown, $25.95)
10. “Manhunt”
James L. Swanson (Morrow, $26.95)
Paperback fiction
1. “No Place Like Home”
Mary Higgins Clark (Pocket, $9.99)
2. “Kill the Messenger”
Tami Hoag (Bantam, $7.99)
3. “The Mermaid Chair”
Sue Monk Kidd (Penguin, $14)
4. “Rage”
Jonathan Kellerman (Ballantine, $7.99
)
5. “Pretty Woman”
Fern Michaels (Pocket, $7.99)
Paperback nonfiction
1. “Night” (new translation)
Elie Wiesel (Hill & Wang, $9)
2. “The Covenant with Black America”
Essays introduced by Tavis Smiley (Third World, $12)
3. “In Cold Blood”
Truman Capote (Vintage, $14)
4. “A Million Little Pieces”
James Frey (Anchor, $14.95)
5. “The Tipping Point”
Malcolm Gladwell (Back Bay/Little, Brown, $14.95)