NONFICTION ADVERTISING NONFICTION 1. “The Wright Brothers,” by David McCullough (Simon &Schuster: $30) Behind the story of two Ohio bicycle mechanics who taught the world how to fly. 2. “The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up,” by Marie Kondo (Ten Speed
NONFICTION
1. “The Wright Brothers,” by David McCullough (Simon &Schuster: $30) Behind the story of two Ohio bicycle mechanics who taught the world how to fly.
2. “The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up,” by Marie Kondo (Ten Speed Press: $16.99) A guru’s guide to decluttering your home and simplifying your life.
3. “Dealing With China,” by Henry M. Paulson Jr. &Michael Carroll (Twelve: $32) The former CEO examines the creation and future of the economic superpower.
4. “Clinton Cash,” by Peter Schweitzer (Harper: $27.99) An expose revealing how the Clintons blurred the lines among politics, philanthropy and business.
5. “The Road to Character,” by David Brooks (Random House: $28) Rethinking our priorities by building strong inner lives filled with humility and moral depth.
6. “The Book of Joan.” by Melissa Rivers (Crown Archetype: $26) Melissa Rivers shares personal stories, outrageous observations and life with her late mother.
7. “Missoula,” by Jon Krakauer (Doubleday: $28.95) An in-depth study of campus rape focusing on a series of assaults in Missoula, Mont.
8. “Dead Wake,” by Erik Larson (Crown: $28) How the 1915 sinking of the Lusitania by the Germans pulled the United States into World War I.
9. “A Curious Mind,” by Brian Grazer &Charles Fishman (Simon &Schuster: $25.99) A career inspired by weekly conversations with accomplished people.
10. “H Is for Hawk,” by Helen MacDonald (Grove Press: $26) Mourning the death of her father, a falconer resolves to train a goshawk.
FICTION
1. “All the Light We Cannot See,” by Anthony Doerr (Scribner: $27) A blind French girl and a German teenager meet in occupied France during WWII.
2. “The Girl on the Train,” by Paula Hawkins (Riverhead: $26.95) A London commuter is witness to a woman’s disappearance in this psychological thriller.
3. “God Help the Child,” by Toni Morrison (Knopf: $24.95) A successful businesswoman’s personal life is affected when childhood trauma resurfaces.
4. “A God in Ruins,” by Kate Atkinson (Little, Brown: $28) The backward life of Teddy Todd from assisted-living facility to his youth in the Royal Air Force.
5. “Echo,” by Pam Munoz Ryan (Scholastic: $19.99) A young boy’s magical harmonica connects the stories of three misfit children in the 20th century.
6. “The Nightingale,” by Kristin Hannah (St. Martin’s: $27.99) Two sisters embark on different and dangerous paths in German-occupied France during WWII.
7. “Early Warning,” by Jane Smiley (Knopf: $26.95) The second installment in a trilogy picks up with the funeral of the Langdon family patriarch.
8. “My Struggle: Book Four,” by Karl Ove Knausgaard (Archipelago: $27) A darker side of life as a teacher in an arctic fisherman’s village.
9. “Rock With Wings,” by Anne Hillerman (Harper: $27.99) Married Navajo tribal cops investigate two separate yet equally perplexing cases.
10. “Gathering Prey,” by John Sandford (Putnam: $28.95) Someone is killing panhandlers who move from city to city in this latest Lucas Davenport novel.