PAGE 8 • GO! MAGAZINE THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2021 • THE BULLETIN national bestsellers Here are the bestsellers for the week that ended Saturday, Feb. 13, compiled from data from independent and chain bookstores, book wholesalers and independent distributors nationwide. HARDCOVER FICTION 1. The Four Winds. Kristin Hannah. St. Martin’s 2. Faithless in Death. J.D. Robb. St. Martin’s 3. The Sanatorium. Sarah Pearse. Viking/Dorman 4. The Vanishing Half. Brit Bennett. Riverhead 5. The Midnight Library. Matt Haig. Viking 6. The Russian. Patterson/Born. Little, Brown 7. The Invisible Life of Addie Larue. V.E. Schwab. Tor 8. The Paris Library. Janet Skeslien Charles. Atria 9. In Love & Pajamas. Catana Chetwynd. Continued from previous page separately, and then write that section up,” he said. “The other person will edit heavily. … We’re both used to being edited. We don’t take it personally.” For “Tightrope,” WuDunn tackled more of the stories from around the nation, while Kristof interviewed and wrote about people around his hometown of Yamhill, where he grew up on a sheep and cherry farm before attending Harvard and studying law at Ox- ford University as a Rhodes scholar. In addition to writing books, Kristof is Andrews McMeel 10. The Return. Nicholas Sparks. Grand Central HARDCOVER NONFICTION 1. Keep Sharp. Sanjay Gupta. Simon & Schuster 2. Walk in My Combat Boots. Patterson/Eversmann. Little, Brown 3. Think Again. Adam Grant. Viking 4. A Promised Land. Barack Obama. Crown 5. Greenlights. Matthew McConaughey. Crown 6. Four Hundred Souls. Kendi/Blain. One World 7. Just as I Am. Cicely Tyson. HarperCollins 8. Caste. Isabel Wilkerson. Random House 9. Untamed. Glennon Doyle. Dial 10. Unmasked. Andy Ngo. Center Street renowned for his travels and his opinion writing in The New York Times. He’s been called the Indiana Jones of journalism, as well as its North Star. He’s traveled to dozens of countries, creating a body of work that has contributed to real change. His series of columns on Darfur in 2005 helped to shine a light on the genocide happening there and netted him the 2006 Pulitzer Prize for com- mentary. Helping the world to notice what was happening there is among his proudest ac- complishments, Kristof said, but his im- MASS MARKET 1. Reckless Road. Christine Feehan. Berkley 2. Rafael. Laurell K. Hamilton. Berkley 3. The Numbers Game. Danielle Steel. Dell 4. The Lost and Found Bookshop. Susan Wiggs. Avon 5. Long Range. C.J. Box. Putnam 6. The Sea Glass Cottage. RaeAnne Thayne. HQN 7. Highland Treasure. Lynsay Sands. Avon 8. Revenge. Patterson/Holmes. Grand Central 9. Perfect Partners. Debbie Macomber. Mira 10. Trailing a Killer. Carol J. Post. Love Inspired Suspense TRADE PAPERBACK 1. Burn After Writing (pink). Sharon Jones. portant work continues today. Last year, he spent months investigating the video site Pornhub, exposing flaws in site policies that enabled unverified users to post videos de- picting rape and underage victims in a Dec. 4 piece. As a result of Kristof’s work, Porn- hub removed unverified videos within days, reducing its content from 13.5 million vid- eos to fewer than 3 million , according to a CNN report. While the pandemic curtailed the kind of international travel he’s become known for, Kristof did manage to travel domestically, including a visit to the Navajo Nation and time back in New York. Otherwise, they’ve spent much of the past year at the family farm where he grew up. “We began doing our last book, ‘Tight- rope,’ at the beginning of 2018, so we began spending disproportionate time on the farm, and, boy,” Kristof said, laughing, “it’s a lot nicer being on the farm than in New York.” Being in Yamhill keeps Kristof grounded, he said. “I really think that’s hugely important,” he said. “Because in New York, I tend to be in a fairly liberal bubble, and in Yamhill I tend to be in a pretty conservative bubble. Because while Oregon as a whole may be blue, the town of Yamhill is pretty red. My neighbors certainly tend to be pro-Trump conserva- tives. And they have very different concerns. It’s very useful for my reporting to be re- minded of that and to see people who have different perspectives.” Kristof has addressed his neighbors directly in columns such as “A Letter to My Conser- vative Friends,” a Jan. 27 piece assuring neigh- bors they won’t be sent to re education camps. He implores them to pressure liberals for hon- esty — and to apply the same pressure to the “con artists waving flags” who have “hood- winked, exploited and manipulated” them. So he does what he can to mend fences. “At a time when the whole country is so po- larized, I can try to build my little bridges, but also one by one with neighbors who I deeply care about, even if they’re completely wrong politically,” he said, laughing. TarcherPerigee 2. Fair Warning. Michael Connelly. Grand Central 3. Home Body. Rupi Kaur. Andrews McMeel 4. The Step-by-Step Instant Pot Cookbook. Jeffrey Eisner. Voracious 5. 28 Summers. Elin Hilderbrand. Back Bay 6. The Girl from the Channel Islands. Jenny Lecoat. Graydon House 7. The Body Is Not an Apology (second ed.). Sonya Renee Taylor. Berrett-Koehler 8. The Dutch House. Ann Patchett. Harper Perennial 9. Circe. Madeline Miller. Back Bay 10. Firefly Lane (TV tie-in). Kristin Hannah. Griffin If You Go What: Author! Author! featuring a virtual conversation with Pulitzer-winning authors Nicholas Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn When: 7 p.m. March 4 Cost: $25 at dplfoundation.org/tickets Contact: dplfoundation.org/author-author Joking aside, Kristof does not write to please other liberals. In fact, in that Jan. 27 col- umn, he wrote “We need Republicans! Amer- ica benefits from a loyal opposition,” and that he believes Republicans have been more cor- rect than many Democrats on matters such as wanting to keep schools open during the pandemic. “I’ve particularly felt that a lot of work- ing -class Americans have been neglected by both parties,” he said. “And that a lot of con- servatives are unsympathetic because they say, ‘Pull yourself up by your bootstraps,’ ‘ it’s all about bad choices.’ And a lot of liber- als say, ‘Oh, they’re all bigots who voted for Trump.’ I think both approaches are mistaken, and that we should be doing less finger-point- ing and more offering of helping hands.” That’s not to suggest he liked it last year when his more conspiratorially minded neighbors thought antifa was responsible for forest fires. One went so far as to call the sher- iff’s office to report Kristof’s vehicle, “because he thought I might be antifa setting forest fires. It was like, holy-moly,” Kristof said. “I have a real frustration and exasper- ation with conspiracy theories, but I also think that it doesn’t help to mock people. It doesn’t help to insult them,” he said. “It’s got to involve some process of conversation and bridge-building, and I think actually cities like Bend are in somewhat better condition to do that. There are a lot of liberals in Bend itself, but go a little bit in any direction, and it’s all red country. So Bend is kind of on the frontier of these kinds of discussions and ar- guments.” ý David Jasper: 541-383-0349, djasper@bendbulletin.com