

Vanderbilt by Anderson Cooper and Katherine Howe (7 Weeks) The Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist depicts the service of college football players who served in the Marines during World War II.

(8 Weeks) The potential ways in which trauma and stress from modern-day living can affect our physical health. (8 Weeks) The story of the making of the band’s final album, gathered from transcripts of their conversations. (8 Weeks) The Pulitzer Prize–winning science writer explains the sensory perceptions and ways of communication used by a variety of animals. (8 Weeks) The Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer portrays the life of Abraham Lincoln. (9 Weeks) The Fox News host gives an account of the relationship between Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglass. The President and the Freedom Fighter by Brian Kilmeade (9 Weeks) This follow-up to “The Diana Chronicles” details how the royal family reinvented itself after the death of Princess Diana. (9 Weeks) The creator of the web comic “xkcd” and former NASA roboticist looks into hypothetical and oddball scenarios.
#Nytimes best sellers free
Since this is a bit of a sprawling post, feel free to jump to the section that most interests you or take your time scrolling through the complete list of New York Times nonfiction best sellers. Visit the 2023 Bestseller List if you want to find out which books kept ranking into the next year. Note: The week count in this list stops on the last week of 2022. Instead of just the current best seller list, which you can find all over the place, I’ve compiled a list of every book that has appeared on the New York Times Nonfiction Best Sellers list in 2022 for Hardcover Nonfiction. Here are all the New York Times nonfiction bestsellers from 2022.

When I couldn’t find it, I decided to create it. I just wanted all the bestselling nonfiction books gathered together in one place. However, scrolling through the list week by week on The New York Times website is rather annoying. I wanted to know what books were the most widely read, and start with those. When I first started reading adult books, one of the first places I went for book recommendations was the New York Times Nonfiction Nonfiction Best Sellers. Since then, becoming a New York Times bestseller has become a dream for virtually every writer. If you are inclined to buy our book, or encourage other people to do the same, many thanks - but please, don’t everyone buy it during the same week.Since 1931, The New York Times has been publishing a weekly list of bestselling books. So now we have something to shoot for: 99 weeks on the list without ever hitting No. MAN WHO LISTENS TO HORSES (1997), by Monty Roberts (45 weeks) ART OF HAPPINESS (1998), by the Dalai Lama and Howard Cutler (97 weeks)ģ. CONVERSATIONS WITH GOD (1996), by Neale Donald Walsch (98 weeks)Ģ. Here is the company we keep in this category:ġ. There is in fact a perverse pride in having stuck around so long on the Times list without ever reaching the top. To be sure, we have no complaints about our book’s success. 1 spot, denying Freakonomics of that elusive glory. But then 60 Minutes ran a profile (a really wonderful one, btw) of Princeton philosopher Harry Frankfurt and his cult hit On Bullshit, which promptly leapfrogged from No. 1 1776 was still a week away, when we seemed destined for No. There was one week, back on June 5 of last year, when we had jumped ahead of books like Blink, The World Is Flat, and My Life So Far (Jane Fonda), and when David McCullough’s surefire No.

1 on a bunch of different lists, here and abroad, but on the list that matters most to people in the publishing industry, we’ve never risen higher than No. Well, leaving aside any discussions of its content, consider this strange fact: in the past 10 years (the only years for which we have data), only two books have spent more time on the New York Times non-fiction best-seller list without ever reaching No.
