UNDER FIRE
by Oliver L. North with William Novak · Zondervan/HarperCollins
When Rachel Flores' tumultuous relationship with Major Liam McCabe ended abruptly, she refocuses her energy onto her career. She plans to forget Liam and live a peaceful life supplying therapy dogs for recovering military vets-until a patient reveals a traitorous plot within the epicenter of military intelligence. Rachel finds herself ensnared within a web of danger, and only one man can help her ...

THE JORDAN RULES
by Sam Smith · Simon & Schuster
Tells how the Chicago Bulls basketball team came together to win the 1991 NBA championship.

WHEN YOU LOOK LIKE YOUR PASSPORT PHOTO, IT'S TIME TO GO HOME
by Erma Bombeck · HarperCollins
The national #1 bestseller from "the wizard of the ordinary moment . . . always fun to read" (The New York Times Book Review). Bombeck is at her hilarious best in this tour de force of laughs, as she offers advice to world weary travelers. "Classic Bombeck".--Kirkus Reviews.

THE WORLD IS MY HOME
by James A. Michener · Random House
Account of the life and death of the Japanese art of print-making, the men who made it, and the lusty age in which they flourished.

PRAIRYERTH
by William Least Heat-Moon · Davison/Houghton Mifflin
This New York Times bestseller by the author of Blue Highways is "a majestic survey of land and time and people in a single county of the Kansas plains" ( Hungry Mind Review). William Least Heat-Moon travels by car and on foot into the core of our continent, focusing on the landscape and history of Chase County—a sparsely populated tallgrass prairie in the Flint Hills of central Kansas—exploring its land, plants, animals, and people until this small place feels as large as the universe. Called a "modern-day Walden" by the Chicago Sun-Times, PrairyErth is a journey through a place, through time, and into the human mind from the acclaimed author of Here, There, Elsewhere: Stories from the Road. "A sense of the American grain that will give [ PrairyErth] a permanent place in the literature of our country." —Paul Theroux, The New York Times



MAUS II
by Art Spiegelman · Pantheon
An autobiographical and biographical cartoon in which the author explores his strained relationship with his father, an Auschwitz survivor, while also relating the story of his parent's experiences as Jews in wartime Poland, as told to him by his dad during a series of conversations they had years later in New York and Vermont.
Historical bestseller data sourced from the New York Times Book Review, archived by Hawes Publications.




