Southern California Rating:FICTION1 SHOPGIRL by Steve...
- Share via
Southern California Rating:
FICTION
1 SHOPGIRL by Steve Martin (Hyperion: $17.95) A young artist who works days in the glove department at Neiman Marcus falls abruptly in love with a millionaire businessman.
Last Week: 2; Weeks on List: 11
2 THE LAST CITY ROOM by Al Martinez (St. Martin’s: $22.95) A novel by the L.A. Times columnist tells the story of the decline of a San Francisco newspaper during the turbulent ‘60s.
Last Week: 7; Weeks on List: 4
3 PRODIGAL SUMMER by Barbara Kingsolver (HarperCollins: $26) In southern Appalachia, three stories of human love intersect within a larger tapestry.
Last Week: 4; Weeks on List: 7
4 THE BLIND ASSASSIN by Margaret Atwood (Nan A. Talese/Doubleday: $26) A narrative tour de force of self-deceit and revenge that joins the lives of two sisters with an unpublished sci-fi novel.
Last Week: 8; Weeks on List: 13
5 LYING AWAKE by Mark Salzman (Alfred A. Knopf: $21) A meditation on spirituality in the life of an Angeleno nun facing a dilemma: Should she have surgery that will cure her of mystical visions?
Last Week: 6; Weeks on List: 11
6 THE SITUE STORIES by Frances Khirallah Noble (Syracuse University Press: $22.95) Eleven interconnected short stories form a drama about an extended Arabic family in America.
Last Week: 3; Weeks on List: 5
7 ROSES ARE RED by James Patterson (Little, Brown: $26.95) Alex Cross battles a cunning bank robber, nicknamed “Mastermind.” Reviewed by Eugen Weber, Page 9.
Last Week: 5; Weeks on List: 3
8 THE PROMETHEUS DECEPTION by Robert Ludlum (St. Martin’s: $27.95) A spy infiltrates his former shadowy agency in this story of post-Cold War double-crosses and Wall Street conspiracies.
Last Week: 13; Weeks on List: 5
9 OFF KECK ROAD by Mona Simpson (Alfred A. Knopf: $19) A novella about a tight-knit group of people coming of age and then growing old together in Green Bay, Wis.
Last Week: 1; Weeks on List: 3
10 THE NIGHT LISTENER by Armistead Maupin (HarperCollins: $26) A writer meets an abused 13-year-old boy with AIDS and finds all of his relationships profoundly changed.
Last Week: --; Weeks on List: 5
11 SOUL MOUNTAIN by Gao Xingjian (HarperCollins: $27) The Nobel Prize-winner shares a story of a man’s inner journey and search for freedom in rural China.
Last Week: --; Weeks on List: 1
12 KILL THE SHOGUN by Dale Furutani (William Morrow: $23) In the last book of the Samurai Mystery trilogy, Matsuyama Kaze revisits some unfinished business.
Last Week: --; Weeks on List: 1
13 WHEN WE WERE ORPHANS by Kazuo Ishiguro (Alfred A. Knopf: $25) An English boy is “orphaned” when his mother and father vanish; years later, he returns as a detective to solve the disappearances.
Last Week: --; Weeks on List: 11
14 DR. DEATH by Jonathan Kellerman (Random House: $26.95) Dr. Eldon Mate, a.k.a. Dr. Death, a proponent of physician-assisted suicide, turns up dead, and there are plenty of suspects.
Last Week: --; Weeks on List: 1
15 CODE TO ZERO by Ken Follett (Dutton: $26.95) A man wakes up in a Washington, D.C., train station in 1958, with no idea who he is or how he got there.
Last Week: --; Weeks on List: 1
NONFICTION
1 DAMN RIGHT! by Janet Lowe (John Wiley & Sons: $27.95) An inside look at Berkshire Hathaway and the man many consider to be “the brains behind Warren Buffett.”
Last Week: --; Weeks on List: 1
2 PARIS TO THE MOON by Adam Gopnik (Random House: $24.95) A personal homage to years spent in the City of Light by a longtime New Yorker writer.
Last Week: 2; Weeks on List: 7
3 DARWIN AWARDS by Wendy Northcutt (Dutton: $16.95) Stupid human tricks: Honoring those who improve our gene pool by eliminating themselves from it.
Last Week: --; Weeks on List: 1
4 NOTHING LIKE IT IN THE WORLD by Stephen Ambrose (Simon & Schuster: $28) The historian looks at the building of the transcontinental railroad and its impact on the growth of the nation.
Last Week: 1; Weeks on List: 16
5 A SHORT GUIDE TO A HAPPY LIFE by Anna Quindlen (Random House: $12.95) The columnist reflects on what it takes to “get a life” by living deeply rather than merely existing.
Last Week: 10; Weeks on List: 5
6 COUNTING COUP by Larry Colton (Warner: $24.95) The story of a girls’ varsity basketball team on the Crow Indian reservation in Montana illuminates the social dilemmas of today’s Native Americans.
Last Week: --; Weeks on List: 1
7 THE O’REILLY FACTOR by Bill O’Reilly (Broadway Books: $23) The TV pundit pontificates on what he finds to be the good, the bad and the completely ridiculous in American life.
Last Week: 6; Weeks on List: 10
8 THE BEATLES ANTHOLOGY by The Beatles (Chronicle Books: $60) Previously unreleased photos, memorabilia and reminiscences that should make any Fab Four fan want to twist and shout.
Last Week: 5; Weeks on List: 10
9 MAESTRO by Bob Woodward (Simon & Schuster: $25) Portrait of Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, who started as a Juilliard-trained sax man and now keeps the U.S. economy in tune.
Last Week: 4; Weeks on List: 4
10 HIDDEN TREASURES by Leigh Keno and Leslie Keno (Warner Books: $29.95) The twin brothers, featured on the Antiques Road Show, share stories about discovering rare furniture treasures.
Last Week: --; Weeks on List: 2
11 IN THE HEART OF THE SEA by Nathaniel Philbrick (Viking: $24.95) Life and death aboard the Nantucket whaler Essex, which was sunk by a sperm whale in 1821.
Last Week --; Last Week: 16
12; JOE DIMAGGIO by Richard Ben Cramer (Simon & Schuster: $28) A biography seeks to capture the allegedly selfish, resentful private life of an American icon clad in Yankee pinstripes.
Last week: 14; Weeks on list: 6
13; WOODEN by John Wooden with Steve Jamison (NTC/Contemporary Publishing: $14.95) The man who won 10 national basketball championships in 12 years at UCLA offers some advice.
Last Week: --; Weeks on List: 1
14; FLAGS OF OUR FATHERS by James Bradley with Ron Powers (Bantam: $24.95) A son pieces together the history of his father, who helped raise the American flag at Iwo Jima
Last Week: --; Weeks on List: 19
15; A LIFE IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY by Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. (Houghton Mifflin: $28.95) The first volume of the historian’s memoirs parallels his development with America’s from 1917 to 1950. 122
Last Week: 12; Weeks on List: 2
PAPERBACKS
FICTION
1 INTERPRETER OF MALADIES by Jhumpa Lahiri (Mariner: $12) Indian customs color the lives of people coping with loss.
2 THE RED TENT by Anita Diamant (Picador USA: $14) The blossoming of Dinah, Jacob’s only daughter, in Genesis.
3 HOUSE OF SAND AND FOG by Andre Dubus III (Vintage: $14) Two families clash over an auctioned house in this tragic tale.
4 DISGRACE by J.M. Coetzee (Penguin: $13) An outcast professor seeks refuge and finds tragedy on a South African farm.
5 WHAT IT TAKES TO GET TO VEGAS by Yxta Maya Murray (Grove: $12) The power and perils of
sisterhood in East L.A.
6 WAITING by Ha Jin (Vintage: $13) A legal loophole allows long-separated lovers to be united.
7 CHOCOLAT by Joanne Harris (Penguin: $12.95) A woman and her daughter open a chocolate store in a French village.
8 GIRL IN HYACINTH BLUE by Susan Vreeland (Penguin: $12) Eight stories linked by a Dutch master’s painting.
9 PERSONAL INJURIES by Scott Turow (Warner: $7.99) Dirty lawyers and dirty judges face off.
10 GYNOMITE edited by Liz Belile (New Mouth from the Dirty South: $14.95) A collection of feminist pornography.
PAPERBACKS
NONFICTION
1 THE WORST-CASE SCENARIO SURVIVAL HANDBOOK by Joshua Piven and David Borgenicht (Chronicle: $14.95) S-O-S!
2 GALILEO’S DAUGHTER by Dava Sobel (Penguin: $14) The famous astronomer and his daughter, a cloistered nun.
3 THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE AND THE CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES (Bantam: $2.95) Let freedom ring.
4 LOST AND FOUND by Elizabeth Pomeroy (Many Moons Press: $16.95) The many landmarks of the San Gabriel Valley.
5 IS OUR CHILDREN LEARNING? by Paul Begala (Simon & Schuster: $12) A pundit skewers George W. Bush’s public career.
6 RICH DAD, POOR DAD by Robert T. Kiyosaki and Sharon L. Lechter (Techpress: $15.95) Adventures in fiscal parenting.
7 THE GHOSTS OF ECHO PARK by Ron Emler (Echo Park Publishing: $15) A pictorial history of the L.A. neighborhood.
8 OH NO! NOT ANOTHER PROBLEM by Jeanette A. Griver and Michele W. Vodrey (Compsych Systems Inc.: $12.95) Problem solving.
9 TALKING DIRTY WITH THE QUEEN OF CLEAN by Linda Cobb (Pocket: $8.99) Quick, inexpensive housekeeping tips galore.
10 WORLD ALMANAC & BOOK OF FACTS 2001 (World Almanac: $10.95) Includes 2000 Olympics and election coverage.
*
Rankings are based on a Times poll of Southland bookstores.
More to Read
Sign up for our Book Club newsletter
Get the latest news, events and more from the Los Angeles Times Book Club, and help us get L.A. reading and talking.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.