MORE BOOKS PAGE 8 • GO! MAGAZINE THURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 2021 • THE BULLETIN national bestsellers Here are the bestsellers for the week that ended Saturday, Jan. 9, compiled from data from independent and chain bookstores, book wholesalers and independent distributors nationwide. HARDCOVER FICTION 1. Star Wars: The High Republic: Light of the Jedi. Charles Soule. Del Rey 2. Neighbors. Danielle Steel. Delacorte 3. The Vanishing Half. Brit Bennett. Riverhead 4. The Return. Nicholas Sparks. Grand Central 5. A Time for Mercy. John Grisham. Doubleday 6. Ready Player Two. Ernest Cline. Ballantine 7. Anxious People. Fredrik Backman. Atria 8. Deadly Cross. James Patterson. Little, Brown Continued from previous page conforming people are talked about and their lived realities. The arsenal of tools for gender self-determination and liberation within this compact book make this a must read for all gender diverse people and their co-conspirators. “Beyond the Gender Binary” is currently available at Deschutes Public Library as an e-book or e-audiobook on Libby. —Rodrigo Gaspar-Barajas, Latino Services coordinator 9. Daylight. David Baldacci. Grand Central 10. The Awakening. Nora Roberts. St. Martin’s HARDCOVER NONFICTION 1. A Promised Land. Barack Obama. Crown 2. Keep Sharp. Sanjay Gupta. Simon & Schuster 3. Know Yourself, Know Your Money. Rachel Cruze. Ramsey 4. Greenlights. Matthew McConaughey. Crown 5. Untamed. Glennon Doyle. Dial 6. Forgiving What You Can’t Forget. Lysa TerKeurst. Nelson 7. Caste. Isabel Wilkerson. Random House 8. Magnolia Table, Vol. 2. Joanna Gaines. Morrow 9. Get Out of Your Head. Jennie Allen. WaterBrook ADULT BOOKS “We Keep the Dead Close: A Murder at Harvard and A Half Century of Silence,” by Becky Cooper This true crime story is perfect for mys- tery lovers looking for a big book to escape into this winter. In 1969, Harvard archaeol- ogy student Jane Britton is found dead in her apartment after missing her comprehensive exams. Cooper, a recent Harvard graduate, 10. D&D: Tasha’s Cauldron of Everything. Wizards of the Coast MASS MARKET 1. Shadows in Death. J.D. Robb. St. Martin’s 2. Bridgerton: The Duke and I (TV tie-in). Julia Quinn. Avon 3. Preacher’s Carnage. William W. Johnstone. Pinnacle 4. An Irish Wish. Nora Roberts. Silhouette 5. Moral Compass. Danielle Steel. Dell 6. Blood in the Dust. William W. Johnstone. Pinnacle 7. The Inn. Patterson/Fox. Grand Central 8. Out of the Storm. B.J. Daniels. HQN 9. Unsolved. Patterson/Ellis. Grand Central 10. Bitter Pill. Fern Michaels. Zebra twines her story with Britton’s to examine power and gender structures at the revered institution as she tries to solve the murder. The book is dense and full of detail, but never slow, as Cooper tracks down cops, friends, colleagues, and suspects, many of whom still stalk the halls of Harvard’s Peabody Museum. “The Office of Historical Corrections,” by Danielle Evans Short story enthusiasts and those struggling to concentrate on longer narratives will want TRADE PAPERBACK 1. My Hero Academia, Vol. 26. Kohei Horikoshi. Viz 2. Home Body. Rupi Kaur. Andrews McMeel 3. Burn After Writing (pink). Sharon Jones. TarcherPerigee 4. The Dutch House. Ann Patchett. Harper Perennial 5. Bridgerton: The Duke and I (TV tie-in). Julia Quinn. Avon 6. The Step-by-Step Instant Pot Cookbook. Jeffrey Eisner. Voracious 7. The Next Right Thing Guided Journal. Emily P. Freeman. Revell 8. NYPD Red 6. Patterson/Karp. Grand Central 9. News of the World (movie tie-in). Paulette Jiles. Morrow 10. The House in the Cerulean Sea. TJ Klune. Tor to pick up Evans’s collection of six stories and one novella. Evans is a master of short fiction, taking her characters in surprising directions both emotionally and physically. Her stories examine universal concepts such as love and grief through the lens of race and history, ask- ing readers to think about American culture in new ways. But this collection is not heavy. Evans’ characters are modern and vibrant, and the twists will delight as much as shock readers into fresh perspectives. —Jenny Pedersen, community librarian In “Beyond the Gender Binary,” Vaid-Menon weaves anecdotes about their own life with a succinct analysis of the colonial origins of the gender binary and the contradictions between how gender non conforming people are talked about and their lived realities. The arsenal of tools for gender self- determination and liberation within this compact book make this a must read for all gender diverse people and their co-conspirators.