TheBestseller
Observatory

Best Sellers

Hardcover Fiction

Week of June 25, 1950

FictionNonfiction
WeekMonth
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1
THE CARDINAL
Henry Morton Robinson
Cover of THE CARDINAL

THE CARDINAL

by Henry Morton Robinson · Simon & Schuster

24 wks at #1 · 12 on list

An "absorbing . . . magnificent" novel about an ordinary Irish Catholic man who ascends the church hierarchy to become Cardinal in the early twentieth century. ( Boston Herald) A selection of the Literary Guild, The Cardinal was published in more than a dozen languages and sold over two million copies. Later made into an Academy Award-nominated film directed by Otto Preminger and starring John Huston, the book tells a story that captured the nation's attention: a working-class American's rise to become a cardinal of the Catholic Church. The daily trials and triumphs of Stephen Fermoyle, from the working-class suburbs of Boston, drive him to become first a parish priest, then secretary to a cardinal, later a bishop, and finally a wearer of the Red Hat. An essential work of American fiction that remains even more relevant today. "Extraordinary . . . controversial . . . first rate storytelling and characterization that has enormous appeal." – Kirkus Reviews

2
THE WALL
John Hersey
Cover of THE WALL

THE WALL

by John Hersey · Alfred A. Knopf

16 wks on list

A novel describing the life of the Jews in the Warsaw ghetto during Poland's German occupation.

4
JUBILEE TRAIL
Gwen Bristow
Cover of JUBILEE TRAIL

JUBILEE TRAIL

by Gwen Bristow · Ty Crowell Co

18 wks on list

Sheltered girl from the East makes the dangerous journey from Santa Fe to Los Angeles in pre-Gold Rush days and learns value of loyal friends.

6
1
THE EGYPTIAN
Mika Waltari
Cover of THE EGYPTIAN

THE EGYPTIAN

by Mika Waltari · Putnam

42 wks on list

Set in Egypt, more than a thousand years before Christ, it encompasses all of the then-known world. It is told by Sinhue, physician to the Pharaoh Akhenaton, and is the story of his life. Through his eyes are seen innumerable characters, fully drawn and covering the whole panorama of the ancient world.

9
1
SLEEP TILL NOON
Max Shulman
Cover of SLEEP TILL NOON

SLEEP TILL NOON

by Max Shulman · Doubleday

9 wks on list

A rags-to-riches tale so outrageously hysterical it could have only come from the marvelous mind of Max Shulman, bestselling author of The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis. A sensitive boy growing up in a bad neighborhood, Harry Riddle doesn't fit in with the kids who hold up gas stations, steal purses, and drop safes on policemen. He prefers to contemplate the American dream and his father's advice for achieving it: “Get rich, boy. Then sleep till noon and screw 'em all. " But when Harry gets his first job as a cafeteria busboy, a customer warns him that money leads to corruption. The idea disturbs him so much that he accidently sticks his hand into a meat grinder. Luckily, attorney Walter Obispo witnesses Harry's mishap and manages to win him a hefty court settlement -- which becomes a lot less hefty when Obispo takes his eighty percent cut. Impressed, Harry decides to make his fortune in law. But the shortcuts he takes to pass the bar and start his own practice do him no good when he loses case after case after case. Not to worry, however, because our hero soon learns the oldest trick in book: Marry rich. With an heiress as a bride, Harry can't lose -- anything except his friends, his integrity, and his sanity, that is.

10
2
THE BIZARRE SISTERS
Jay Walz
Cover of THE BIZARRE SISTERS

THE BIZARRE SISTERS

by Jay Walz · Duell, Sloan & Pearce

5 wks on list

Traces the inbred family scandal of the Randolphs of Virginia.

13
NEW
THE STUBBORN HEART
Frank G. Slaughter
Cover of THE STUBBORN HEART

THE STUBBORN HEART

by Frank G. Slaughter · Doubleday

1 wks on list

Confederate surgeon turns plantation house into hospital.

14
NEW
HIGH VALLEY
Charmian Clift And George Johnston

HIGH VALLEY

by Charmian Clift And George Johnston · Bobbs-Merrill

1 wks on list

"High Valley is the story of Salom, a young man seeking a place where he can be at home and fully accepted. He was orphaned as a baby and adopted and raised by Tibetans. He knows he is not Tibetan. His father was Chinese, a soldier killed marching northward years before with the Chinese Red Army. When Salom is a man grown, he rides down into China to claim his birthright there. His own people reject him. The Chinese jeer at him because of his outlandish Tibetan clothes and his halting tongue. He is not Chinese. Where can he belong?"--Dust jacket.

Historical bestseller data sourced from the New York Times Book Review, archived by Hawes Publications.