Los Angeles Times Bestsellers
March 24, 2002
FICTION
Southern California Rating
1 THE SUMMONS by John Grisham (Doubleday: $27.95) A man discovers $3 million in his dead father’s house and hides it from his prodigal brother and a mysterious extortioner. Last Week: 1 Weeks on List: 5
2 2nd CHANCE by James Patterson (Little, Brown: $26.95) The Women’s Murder Club is back on the case, looking to stop a racist killer who doesn’t like cops. Last Week: 10 Weeks on List: 2
3 THE CORRECTIONS by Jonathan Franzen (Farrar, Straus & Giroux: $26) The saga of a dysfunctional Midwestern family living at the end of the 20th century. Last Week: 8 Weeks on List: 28
4 ATONEMENT by Ian McEwan (Nan A. Talese/Doubleday: $26) A haunting novel of guilt and redemption that follows several lives through the chaos of England in World War II. Last Week: -- Weeks on List: 1
5 BALZAC AND THE LITTLE CHINESE SEAMSTRESS by Daj Sijie (Alfred A. Knopf: $18) Two Chinese youths use classic Western literature to free their minds in the face of communist re-education. Last Week: 9 Weeks on List: 11
6 THE ENGLISH ASSASSIN by Daniel Silva (Putnam: $25.95) An art restorer and spy finds himself framed for the murder of a client and untangles a web of betrayals to find the killer. Last Week: 6 Weeks on List: 2
7 SOUTHAMPTON ROW by Anne Perry (Ballantine: $25) A spiritualist’s murder in 1890s England threatens to derail a candidate’s Parliament bid, unless Thomas Pitt can find the killer. Last Week: -- Weeks on List: 1
8 THE COTTAGE by Danielle Steel (Delacorte Press: $26.95) An aging movie star encounters a whole new world when money troubles force him to rent out part of his Bel-Air estate. Last Week: 5 Weeks on List: 2
9 THE NANNY DIARIES by Emma McLaughlin and Nicola Kraus (St. Martin’s: $24.95) The travails of an overworked and underappreciated Park Avenue caregiver. Last Week: 7 Weeks on List: 2
10 THE GOOD MEN by Charmaine Craig (Riverhead: $24.95) A village rector and the women he loves cope with their desires as inquisitors hunt for heretics in 14th century France. Last Week: 3 Weeks on List: 5
11 HATESHIP, FRIENDSHIP, COURTSHIP, LOVESHIP, MARRIAGE by Alice Munro (Alfred A. Knopf: $24) Stories tracing the nuanced lives of women and their relationships. Last Week: 15 Weeks on List: 12
12 HUNTING SEASON by Nevada Barr (Putnam: $24.95) When a body turns up in Mississippi’s Natchez Trace National Park, a ranger finds her investigation sabotaged at every turn. Last Week: 14 Weeks on List: 3
13 THE MILLIONAIRES by Brad Meltzer (Warner: $25.95) Two brothers who loot the account of a deceased client at a private bank get more than they bargained for. Last Week: 12 Weeks on List: 9
14 BASKET CASE by Carl Hiaasen (Alfred A. Knopf: $25.95) Once a hotshot reporter, an obituary writer for a small paper unravels the bizarre causes of a rock star’s death. Last Week: -- Weeks on List: 7
15 THE JOHN FANTE READER Edited by Stephen Cooper (William Morrow: $25.95) Excerpts from the novels, stories and letters of the celebrated chronicler of Southern California life. Last Week: 13 Weeks on List: 2
NONFICTION
Southern California Rating
1 STUPID WHITE MEN ... AND OTHER SORRY EXCUSES FOR THE STATE OF THE NATION by Michael Moore (Regan Books: $24.95) Lampooning the Bush administration and more. Last Week: 2 Weeks on List: 3
2 THE WISDOM OF MENOPAUSE by Christiane Northrup (Bantam: $27.95) A physician sees menopause, its symptoms and treatments as an opportunity for personal growth. Last Week: 8 Weeks on List: 4
3 BIAS by Bernard Goldberg (Regnery: $27.95) A veteran CBS reporter argues that the mainstream media have been seriously damaged by a liberal, closed-minded worldview. Last Week: 7 Weeks on List: 12
4 SELF MATTERS by Phillip C. McGraw (Simon & Schuster: $25) A self-improvement guru and “Oprah” regular teaches readers how to “create your life from the inside out.” Last Week: 1 Weeks on List: 8
5 WHAT WENT WRONG by Bernard Lewis (Oxford University: $23) An esteemed historian describes the Islamic Middle East’s fall from enlightenment into repression and tyranny. Last Week: 6 Weeks on List: 6
6 NIGGER by Randall Kennedy (Pantheon: $22) The evolution of an explosive word and its shifting meanings in the history of American race relations. Last Week: -- Weeks on List: 1
7 SATISFACTION by Kim Cattrall and Mark Levinson (Warner: $24.95) A star of HBO’s “Sex and the City” and her husband draw on viewer feedback for this guide to pleasing women. Last Week: 14 Weeks on List: 6
8 SACRED CONTRACTS by Caroline Myss (Harmony: $25) Lessons in decoding symbols, myths, intuition and coincidences to understand your purpose in life. Last Week: 4 Weeks on List: 6
9 SHADOW WARRIORS by Tom Clancy with Gen. Carl Stiner (Putnam: $29.95) The recent history of the U.S. military’s Special Forces and their usefulness when conventional tactics fail. Last Week: 10 Weeks on List: 5
10 WHO MOVED MY CHEESE? by Spencer Johnson (Putnam: $19.95) The co-author of “The One-Minute Manager” uses the parable of mice in a maze to discuss managing change. Last Week: 3 Weeks on List: 103
11 JOHN ADAMS by David McCullough (Simon & Schuster: $35) The story of our second president, a man Thomas Jefferson called “the colossus of independence.” Last Week: 15 Weeks on List: 43
12 THE UNIVERSE IN A NUTSHELL by Stephen Hawking (Bantam: $35) The celebrated physicist offers up a look at space, time and the origin and future of the universe. Last Week: -- Weeks on List: 13
13 THE BUREAU AND THE MOLE by David A. Vise (Atlantic Monthly: $25) The story behind Robert Hanssen, the veteran FBI agent who doubled as a Russian spy. Last Week: 11 Weeks on List: 2
14 SHAKEDOWN by Kenneth R. Timmerman (Regnery: $29.95) An investigative reporter contends that Jesse Jackson has used the race issue for personal gain. Last Week: 13 Weeks on List: 2
15 YOU’RE ONLY AS GOOD AS YOUR NEXT ONE by Mike Medavoy with Josh Young (Pocket Books: $27) Memoir of a studio exec’s rise from the Universal mailroom to movie mogul-dom. Last Week: 5 Weeks on List: 5
Paperbacks
FICTION
Southern California Rating
1 THE AMAZING ADVENTURES OF KAVALIER & CLAY by Michael Chabon (Picador: $15) Cousins in the comics biz.
2 TELL NO ONE by Harlan Coben (Dell: $6.99) A long-dead love affair is revived when a man receives a strange message.
3 1st TO DIE by James Patterson (Warner Vision: $7.99) Four
women track a killer with a penchant for newlyweds.
4 THE BONESETTER’S DAUGHTER by Amy Tan (Ballantine: $7.99) A ghostwriter uncovers her family’s anguished past.
5 A PAINTED HOUSE by John Grisham (Dell Island: $7.99) Violence looms over a boyhood in rural Arkansas in 1952.
6 THE RED TENT by Anita Diamant (Picador USA: $14.95) The blossoming of Dinah, Jacob’s only daughter, in Genesis.
7 THE LAST TIME THEY MET by Anita Shreve (Little, Brown: $13.95) Two poets share a lifelong passion.
8 A WALK TO REMEMBER by Nicholas Sparks (Warner: $6.99) A man recalls the bittersweet love story of his youth.
9 A SMALL DEATH IN LISBON by Robert Wilson (Berkley: $7.99) A murder in 1970s Portugal has a Nazi connection.
10 A DARKNESS MORE THAN NIGHT by Michael Connelly (Warner: $7.99) An ace detective is a prime murder suspect.
NONFICTION
Southern California Rating
1 THE WRINKLE CURE by Nicholas Perricone (Warner: $13.95) Using antioxidants to keep the skin looking young.
2 FAST FOOD NATION by Eric Schlosser (HarperCollins: $13.95) The unappetizing practices of the junk-food industry.
3 A BEAUTIFUL MIND by Sylvia Nasar (Touchstone: $16) A brilliant mathematics professor’s battle with schizophrenia.
4 9-11 by Noam Chomsky (Seven Stories Press: $8.95) An alternative view of the U.S.-led war on terrorism.
5 FOUNDING BROTHERS by Joseph Ellis (Vintage: $14) The genius, cunning and flaws of the nation’s architects.
6 THE BLESSING OF A SKINNED KNEE by Wendy Mogel (Penguin: $14) Applying Jewish thought to raising children.
7 WE WERE SOLDIERS ONCE ... AND YOUNG by Harold G. Moore and Joseph Galloway (Harper: $7.99) Against all odds.
8 THE FOUR AGREEMENTS by Don Miguel Ruiz (Amber-Allen: $12.95) Life lessons based on ancient Toltec wisdom.
9 RICH DAD, POOR DAD by Robert T. Kiyosaki with Sharon L. Lechter (Techpress: $15.95) Adventures in fiscal parenting.
10 THE TIPPING POINT by Malcolm Gladwell (Back Bay: $14.95) How fads, trends and ideas behave like viruses in a society.
More to Read
Sign up for our Book Club newsletter
Get the latest news, events and more from the Los Angeles Times Book Club, and help us get L.A. reading and talking.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.