![]() MIDDLESEX, Jeffrey Eugenides (Picador 544 pages $15): This Pulitzer Prize-winning kaleidoscopic tale of a hermaphrodite by the author of "The Virgin Suicides" spans generations and continents. THE KITE RUNNER, Khaled Hosseini (Riverhead 388 pages $14): Saga of boyhood friends separated by Afghanistan's tragic upheavals. THE CURIOUS INCIDENT OF THE DOG IN THE NIGHTTIME, Mark Haddon (Vintage 240 pages $12): The unique worldview of a 15-year-old autistic boy gives him a surprising advantage in unraveling a neighborhood mystery. , who stayed with the author through his spiritual - and temporal - ups and downs RUNNING ON EMPTY, Peter Peterson (FSG 272 pages $24): The secretary of commerce under Nixon blames both parties for the sad state of the country today.įATHER JOE, Tony Hendra (Random House 288 pages $24.95): A memoir of the comedian's spiritual mentor, an English Benedictine monk. OBLIVIOUSLY ON HE SAILS, Calvin Trillin (Random House 112 pages $12.95): The "Deadline Poet" makes fun of the current administration. WHAT'S THE MATTER WITH KANSAS?, Thomas Frank (Metropolitan 397 pages $24): Why small-town middle Americans vote for conservative Republicans, against what the author of "The Conquest of Cool" sees as their own best interest. THE UNDRESSED ART, Peter Steinhart (Knopf 272 pages $23): The Palo Alto naturalist, author of "The Company of Wolves" and drawing aficionado, explores the role of that art in our history. ![]() SHADOW DIVERS, Robert Kurson ( Random House 400 pages $26.95): Story of two deep-sea divers and their obsessive quest for the history of a wrecked U-boat they discovered deep in coastal waters off New Jersey. THE SOUTH BEACH DIET, Arthur Agatston (Viking 310 pages $24.95): Low-carbohydrate, high-protein and high-fiber diet. MY LIFE, Bill Clinton (Knopf 957 pages $35): An exhaustive autobiography by the former president shows his public, presentable, productive side as well as the private, shamefaced, needy little boy.ĮATS, SHOOTS & LEAVES, Lynne Truss (Gotham 240 pages $17.50): A passionate plea for good grammar by a British writer with a zero-tolerance approach to incorrect punctuation.ĭRESS YOUR FAMILY IN CORDUROY AND DENIM, David Sedaris (Little, Brown 272 pages $24.95): A collection of witty, restless, endearingly peevish essays by the author of "Me Talk Pretty One Day" in which everybody - especially the author - comes off looking bad. 1 Ladies Detective Agency, returns with another refreshing dose of her folk wisdom, sweetness and sly humor.Ī GOOD YEAR, Peter Mayle (Knopf 287 pages $24): An unemployed Englishman inherits a vineyard in Provence in a playful novel of intrigue by the author of "A Year in Provence." THE FULL CUPBOARD OF LIFE, Alexander McCall Smith (Pantheon 198 pages $19.95): Precious Ramotswe, proprietor of Botswana's No. From the author of "Tuesdays With Morrie." THE FIVE PEOPLE YOU MEET IN HEAVEN, Mitch Albom (Hyperion 198 pages $19.95): Three stories about Eddie, an 83-year-old amusement park maintenance man. THE CONFESSIONS OF MAX TIVOLI, Andrew Sean Greer (Farrar Straus & Giroux 288 pages $23): The poignant story of a San Francisco man who ages backward, by the author of "The Path of Minor Planets." LITTLE SCARLET, Water Mosley (Little, Brown 320 pages $24.95): Easy Rawlins helps the police solve the murder of a black woman in L.A. THE JANE AUSTEN BOOK CLUB, Karen Joy Fowler (Putnam 304 pages $23.95): Five women and a man Six people meet periodically in California's Central Valley to talk and read Jane Austen. THE RULE OF FOUR, Ian Caldwell, Dustin Thomason (Dial 372 pages $24): Two Princeton students unravel the secrets of an enigmatic medieval manuscript. R IS FOR RICOCHET, Sue Grafton (Putnam 350 pages $26.95): PI Kinsey Millhone tries to keep a sexy embezzler with a privileged background on the straight and narrow. THE DA VINCI CODE, Dan Brown (Doubleday 454 pages $24.95): Thriller features the return of Harvard scholar Robert Langdon ("Angels & Demons") on the trail of secret religious societies. SKINNY DIP, Carl Hiaasen (Knopf 368 pages $24.95): More bad behavior down in the Everglades, this time featuring a greedy Marine scientist. (see chart below) SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE BEST-SELLERS
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