PAGE 8 • GO! MAGAZINE THURSDAY, APRIL 29, 2021 • THE BULLETIN national bestsellers Here are the bestsellers for the week that ended Saturday, April 17, compiled from data from independent and chain bookstores, book wholesalers and independent distributors nationwide. HARDCOVER FICTION 1. Ocean Prey. John Sandford. Putnam 2. The Devil’s Hand. Jack Carr. Atria/Bestler 3. The Four Winds. Kristin Hannah. St. Martin’s 4. The Midnight Library. Matt Haig. Viking 5. The Red Book. Patterson/Ellis. Little, Brown 6. The Good Sister. Sally Hepworth. St. Martin’s 7. Win. Harlan Coben. Grand Central 8. The Invisible Life of Addie Larue. V.E. Schwab. Tor 9. Stargazer. Anne Hillerman. Harper 10. Klara and the Sun. Kazuo Ishiguro. Knopf 9. Fast Burn! Ian K. Smith. St. Martin’s 10. Woman Evolve. Sarah Jakes Roberts. Thomas Nelson HARDCOVER NONFICTION MASS MARKET 1. The Hill We Climb. Amanda Gorman. Viking 2. On the House. John Boehner. St. Martin’s 3. The Women of the Bible Speak. Shannon Bream. Broadside 4. The Hero Code. William H. McRaven. Grand Central 5. Everything Will Be Okay. Dana Perino. Twelve 6. The Pepper Thai Cookbook. Pepper Teigen and Garrett Snyder. Clarkson Potter 7. Broken Horses. Brandi Carlile. Crown 8. Ask Iwata. Sam Bett. Viz 1. A Rancher’s Claim. Diana Palmer. Harlequin 2. A Walk Along the Beach. Debbie Macomber. Ballantine 3. The Wedding Dress. Danielle Steel. Dell 4. Under Currents. Nora Roberts. St. Martin’s 5. The Country Guesthouse. Robyn Carr. Mira 6. Alaskan Rescue. Terri Reed. Love Inspired Suspense 7. Masked Prey. John Sandford. Putnam 8. Camino Winds. John Grisham. Dell 9. Killer Instinct. Patterson/Roughan. Grand Central 10. Catch My Heart. Nora Roberts. Silhouette TRADE PAPERBACK 1. The Lighter Step-by-Step Instant Pot Cookbook. Jeffrey Eisner. Voracious 2. Where the Crawdads Sing. Delia Owens. Putnam 3. Later. Stephen King. Hard Case Crime 4. The Rose Code. Kate Quinn. Morrow 5. The Palm Beach Murders. James Patterson. Grand Central 6. Big Summer. Jennifer Weiner. Washington Square 7. Split Second. David Baldacci. Grand Central 8. Burn After Writing (Pink). Sharon Jones. TarcherPerigee 9. The Hemingway Stories. Ernest Hemingway. Scribner 10. My Hero Academia, Vol. 27. Kohei Horikoshi. Viz Continued from previous page Lalami, who will appear in a virtual con- versation at 4 p.m. Sunday with Bend’s own Jason Graham, aka Mosley Wotta, told GO! how real-life circumstances several years ago inspired the book — “sort of.” She’d just turned in copy edits for her 2014 historical novel “The Moor’s Account,” which won the American Book Award and the Arab Amer- ican Book Award. “While I was on vacation, I got a text from my sister saying that our father had taken gravely ill,” Lalami said. “We scrambled to try and get on a plane and go visit him. When you’re an immigrant, your parents are thousands of miles away. You can’t just see them when you want to.” He recovered, but Lalami “started to re- ally realize some of the consequences of decisions that you make when you’re in your 20s, and you don’t really see the rip- ple effects of it 20 years later,” she said. “Because I came to the United States as a graduate student, and then I ended up marrying an American and staying here. I didn’t really realize the consequences of that.” With the onset of the COVID-19 pan- demic, she added, Americans born here have likely felt a similar isolation and dis- tance from loved ones. “That IS the life of the immigrant, and that certainly has been my life over the last 20-plus years,” Lalami said. She thought about writing about a cou- ple who immigrates to the U.S., settling on 1981 as the year Driss and Maryam arrive in the U.S. “And then they have another child, and then basically, the story opens 35 years later, when the father dies,” she said. “It’s basically a family story, but it’s also a mystery, and it’s also a love story.” ‘FRONT DESK’ In “Front Desk,” Chinese-American pro- tagonist Mia, 10, helps run the front desk at a motel while her parents are cleaning it. A Novel Idea ... Read Together What: A Novel Idea presents Kelly Yang and Laila Lalami Details: • Yang will give her virtual presentation at 4 p.m. Saturday. View it at youtube.com/user/deschuteslibrary • Lalami will join Jason “Mosley Wotta” Graham in a virtual conversation at 4 p.m. Sunday. View it at youtube.com/user/deschuteslibrary Contact: deschuteslibrary.org/calendar/novelidea Like “The Other Americans,” it was born of real-life experiences, author Yang said by email last week. “’Front Desk’ is inspired by my child- hood,” Yang said. “I helped my parents manage three motels when I was a kid. There is definitely a lot of myself in Mia. Mia is the more courageous version of my- self — growing up, I wished I were more like Mia!” Yang’s virtual A Novel Idea program takes place at 3:30 p.m. Saturday. Asked about what she has planned for the event, “I will tell kids how I went from managing the front desk of a motel to be- coming an award-winning author, a dream I once did not think was possible for me because I did not see many authors who looked like me,” she said. “But now, I know it is totally possible for all kids.” Yang was 6 when she immigrated to the U.S. from China, growing up in Southern California and working at three motels. At 13, she began college at University of Cali- fornia-Berkeley, where she majored in po- litical science. At 17, she began studying at Harvard Law School, though she opted not to pur- sue a legal career. “I went to law school but did not really enjoy practicing law,” Yang said. “So I re- turned to my first passion of writing and teaching kids how to write.” Published in 2018, “Front Desk” made several best-of-the-year lists, including ones from The Washington Post, NPR, School Library Journal and Amazon. It has already spawned one sequel, “Three Keys,” published last September. A third, “Room to Dream,” will bow in September of this year. Though it may be a children’s book, Yang sees the ideal reader of the book as anyone from 8 to 100. “I hope it helps increase empathy,” she said, adding later that she believes litera- ture, and diverse characters, can help fos- ter understanding among people. “Absolutely — now more than ever we need more stories that humanize the Asian American experience,” Yang said. Last year, Yang experienced anti-Asian hate speech while visiting a park with her children last year. “I was verbally assaulted at the park, in front of my kids, and told to go back to where I came from,” she said, adding that “it was pretty traumatic.” As the Associated Press reported, an el- derly white couple called her “Oriental” and told her to “Go back where you came from,” sparking a difficult conversation with her children and tears from her son when she explained their words didn’t just mean they should return home, but rather “for us to go back to Asia.” As Yang told GO! “People can be bet- ter allies simply by standing up for what’s right and using the three keys of allyship (as explained in the sequel to ‘Front Desk,’ ‘Three Keys’) … you gotta listen, you gotta care, and you gotta keep trying!” David Jasper: 541-383-0349, djasper@bendbulletin.com Submitted photos Laila Lalami’s “The Other Americans” is the adult selection for the 2021 A Novel Idea, the Deschutes Public Library system’s annual com- munity read. Lalami will give a live presentation as part of the community read’s festivities at 4 p.m. Sunday on YouTube. Kelly Yang, author of “Front Desk,” will speak Saturday via Zoom as part of A Novel Idea.