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The best spring reads, according to bestselling authors Isaac Fitzgerald and Jasmine Guillory

Every reader in your life (including yourself!) deserves an inspiring spring read to kick off the start of the warmer weather and celebrate the end of the dark, cold winter months.

Lucky for us, New York Times bestselling authors and literary experts — Isaac Fitzgerald and Jasmine Guillory — stopped by TODAY to shine some light on a few of their favorite spring picks for readers of all ages and interests.

Isaac’s Picks

"wandering stars" by tommy orange.

Wandering Stars

Wandering Stars

"A brutal, bloody portrait of the campaign to erase Native American culture told through the eyes of numerous complex and compelling characters shows how the sins of the past weigh heavily on the never ending present — especially for those who have been severed from their own legacy," Fitzgerald says.

"Grief Is for People" by Sloane Crosley

Grief Is for People

Grief Is for People

"In prose that is both personal and raw — and yet somehow still makes room for Crosley’s rightfully-heralded wit — 'Grief Is for People' is a powerful, touching memoir that explores a place we are all going to be at some point," Fitzgerald shares.

"The Book of Love" by Kelly Link

The Book of Love

The Book of Love

Fitzgerald calls this fantasy novel "difficult to sum up, but incredibly easy to read."

"Link is an extraordinary writer, and a weird writer, and this novel is the culmination of all of her talents," he adds.

"My Thoughts Have Wings" by Maggie Smith

My Thoughts Have Wings

My Thoughts Have Wings

Written by beloved poet and New York Times bestseller Maggie Smith, "My Thoughts Have Wings" is a moving children's novel for the child in your life.

"Gorgeously illustrated by Leanne Hatch, 'My Thoughts Have Wings' is a picture book that confronts anxiety with thoughtfulness, and is a balm for the chaotic soul," Fitzgerald says.

Jasmine's Picks

"the partner plot" by kristina forest.

The Partner Plot

The Partner Plot

"The Partner Plot" is a rom-com about two high school sweethearts who reconnect after 10 years and then must pretend to be engaged.

"It thoughtfully explores how dream jobs can be not as dreamy as we want them to be, the way we grow and change, family relationships, how to come back from disappointing ourselves, and so much more," Guillory shares. "A treat for any romance lover!"

  "The Last Fire Season" by Manjula Martin

The Last Fire Season

The Last Fire Season

Written by Manjula Martin, a woman who lived through the 2020 fire season in California, "The Last Fire Season" is a memoir that Guillory admits she'll be thinking about for a long time.

"It’s the story of how California came to be, it’s the story of fire, and why it’s both essential to life and something we all fear, and it’s the story of how fire season is no longer one time of the year, or in one part of the world, but is something that impacts us all," Guillory says.

"This Could Be Us" by Kennedy Ryan

This Could Be Us

This Could Be Us

Guillory issues a warning for this one: "Don’t open it unless you’re prepared to do nothing but read it until you’ve finished it. If you can’t do that, you’ll be thinking about how you wish you were reading it, and get mad at who or what is getting in your way of reading it."

Shut Up, This Is Serious

Shut Up, This Is Serious

"Wonderful, funny, powerful, and compulsively readable, this book about two teenage girls growing up in Oakland is a great read for teens and adults alike. Friendship, family, and chosen family are at the core of this book, and I loved every moment of it," Guillory shares.

sunday times bestseller books 2020

Laura Millar is an NBC Page on the TODAY Digital team. She recently graduated from the University of Michigan with a B.A. in Film, Television and Media. Some of her personal interests include reality TV, horror movies and Harry Styles.

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‘Moscow exerts a strong gravitational force on writers’.The Novospassky monastery.

10 of the best novels set in Russia – that will take you there

This list of novels and novellas will help you explore Russia’s vast landscapes and complex history Add your favourites to the comments

I spent several years wandering round Russia with books in my rucksack. And several more years reviewing Russian fiction and finding myself transported back, whether to a village with chickens pecking through orchards round a wooden church or to a drunken kitchen table debate in a high-rise overlooking the Moscow suburbs. This subjective list of engaging, relatively readable novels and novellas recreates various Russian landscapes, eras and atmospheres, often in ways that no amount of travelling could. As Ludmila Ulitskaya writes in The Big Green Tent: “Military historians have found many discrepancies in Tolstoy’s description of the Battle of Borodino, but the whole world imagines the event just as Tolstoy described it in War and Peace.”

Yevgeny Onegin by Alexander Pushkin

The River Neva in St Petersburg.

A bored young man inherits a country estate, where a shy, book-loving local girl falls for him. Alexander Pushkin, father of Russian literature, crams laughter, literature, duelling and tempestuous romance into his playful 1820s verse novel. A series of distilled Russian settings serve as backdrops. First: theatres, dancing, lamplit snowy streets, soft summer nights by the glass-smooth River Neva and hungover rides home in the Petersburg morning-after. Then young Onegin’s rich uncle dies, leaving him the country estate, boasting a “vast garden, overgrown/ with wistful dryads set in stone.” Inside, there are brocaded walls, portraits of tsars, tiled stoves and homemade liqueurs. Pushkin lovingly details (although they bore the novel’s hero) traditional rye beer, berry picking, seething samovars and little dishes of jam. So, finally, to Moscow, “chiselled in white stone / the buildings topped with fiery glory / A golden cross on every dome”. Translated by Anthony Briggs, Pushkin Press

Happiness is Possible by Oleg Zaionchkovsky

Moscow exerts a strong gravitational force on writers, just as it does on Chekhov’s three sisters with their refrain, “To Moscow, to Moscow…” One of the subtlest evocations of modern Moscow is Oleg Zaionchkovsky’s Happiness is Possible , a series of darkly comic vignettes published in 2012. The narrator is a struggling novelist whose ambitious wife has left him. Discursive, fatalistic and fond of sleeping in the day, he is reminiscent of Ivan Goncharov’s sluggish hero Oblomov, Russian literature’s traditional “superfluous man”. What his story lacks in plot, it amply repays in dishevelled charm and style. He shuffles, unshaven, through the dacha village of Vaskovo and fills the abandoned apartment with dog hair and ashtrays. Zaionchkovsky’s narrator conveys the city’s magnetic pull, finding a secret solace and reassurance in the deafening noise: “We are Muscovites, children of the metro; time and again we seek refuge in its maternal womb.” Translated by Andrew Bromfield, And Other Stories

The Underground by Hamid Ismailov

Mayakovskaya station

The palatial metro system is one of the best things about Moscow. Several novels take place in its tunnels, including Mikhail Glukhovsky’s dystopian Metro 2033, first in a series of philosophical, post-apocalyptic underground adventures. Hamid Ismailov’s The Underground uses metro stations to structure the posthumous reminiscences of young Kirill. Born nine months after the 1980 Olympics to a Siberian mother and an African father, Kirill dies soon after the collapse of the USSR a decade later. There are recurrent images of the metro as a body, with “stone intestines” or marble pillars like a woman’s legs, “bare to the hip”. Exiled Uzbek author Hamid Ismailov has woven this poignant story, a fictionalised memoir inspired by episodes from his and his family’s own peripatetic lives, into a haunting landscape-tapestry of 20th-century Moscow. Translated by Carol Ermakova, Restless Books

He Lover of Death by Boris Akunin

Boris Akunin, whose real name is Grigory Chkhartishvili, is famous for his bestselling series of clever, tsarist-era thrillers. If you haven’t read any, start with The Winter Queen, which introduces the brilliantly understated detective work of diplomat-turned-sleuth Erast Fandorin . In He Lover of Death , Oliver Twist meets Treasure Island as we follow the adventures of orphaned urchin Senka through 19th-century Moscow. Akunin recreates the slums of Khitrovka, full of spiced tea stalls and gangsters in shiny boots (today the area is all banks and top-end restaurants, of course). Senka finds a hoard of antique silver bars, hires a student to teach him how to be a gentleman and is soon at the theatre, marvelling that people will pay “seven roubles to sit in a prickly collar for three hours” and watch “men in tight underpants jumping about”. The tale’s gruesome denouement has a characteristic blend of action, deduction, intrigue and morality. Translated by Andrew Bromfield, Orion 2010

Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk by Nikolai Leskov

Florence Pugh as Lady Macbeth in the 2016 film

Florence Pugh played the title role in an unflinching 2016 film version of this brutal 19th-century novella , a tale of provincial lust and murder. If people have heard of Nikolai Leskov at all, it’s usually because of Lady Macbeth. Dostoevsky first published it in his literary magazine and Shostakovich later turned it into an ill-fated opera . From the bored merchant’s wife, romping with a newly arrived farmhand under moonlit apple blossom, to a chilling denouement near the “dark, gape-jawed waves” of the leaden Volga, the story showcases Leskov’s restless evocation of place and passion. The setting, with its buckwheat kasha and icon lamps, has bureaucratic warrants and certificates alongside folkloric elements: the locked-up tower of the merchant’s house and the wife’s lover, “like a bright falcon”. In The Enchanted Wanderer and other stories , translated by Pevear and Volokhonsky, Vintage

2017 by Olga Slavnikova

One hundred years after the 1917 revolution, a gem cutter called Krylov falls in love in a Russian city where centenary celebrations lead to repeated cycles of violence. Meanwhile, gem prospectors or “rock hounds” search for precious stones in the mythical Riphean mountains (inspired by Slavnikova’s native Urals). This winner of the 2006 Russian Booker Prize is a genre-defying mashup of speculative fiction, magic realism, romance and thriller. Among many prescient interwoven threads are an ecological catastrophe triggered by human greed, and an epidemic of nostalgia, sparking civil war. In St Petersburg, costumed revolutionary sailors try to fire a museum tank gun at the Winter Palace and in Moscow the toppled monument to murderous security chief Felix Dzerzhinsky is resurrected (this bit almost came true recently). There’s an evocative Russianness in the novel’s linguistic subtlety, the fantastical mountain gorges, the cavalcades on city streets and the pervasive, Kafkaesque sense of strangeness. Translated by Marian Schwartz, Overlook Duckworth

The Big Green Tent by Ludmila Ulitskaya

Framed by modern building of the Hotel Belgrade in downtown Moscow, the Soviet Foreign Ministry in its Stalinist style,

A war-wounded teacher arrives at a 1950s Moscow school and forms a Dead Poets Society-style club, where he leads the boys through the city streets, peeling back the layers of its literary and historical palimpsest. One dilapidated house, where two of the boys later lose their virginity, provides a physical metaphor for Moscow’s strata: “Its walls had been covered in silk, then in empire wallpaper, … in crude oil paint, … then layers of newsprint…” Ulitskaya is always redolent and readable. The interlocking stories in The Big Green Tent revolve around two groups of school friends. This generous novel, spanning four decades of Soviet life, has a Tolstoyan ambition to capture the spirit of an age. Beyond the deftly drawn settings (trams, ice skating, Karelian birchwood furniture) is a powerful sense of cultural baggage. “We live not in nature, but in history,” Ulitskaya writes, as her protagonists walk down a lane once trodden by Pushkin and later Pasternak, “skirting the eternal puddles.” Translated by Polly Ganon, Picador

The Mountain and The Wall by Alisa Ganieva

The Russian authorities are planning to build a wall to isolate the troublesome Caucasus from the rest of the country. That’s the rumour that drives Alisa Ganieva’s 2012 novel, set in a dystopian-yet-real version of her hometown of Makhachkala, Dagestan’s coastal capital city. Shamil, a young Dagestani reporter, wanders the streets while his girlfriend, Madina, dons a hijab and heads for the hills to marry a murderous zealot. It’s another prophetic narrative and Ganieva’s picture of the social and psychological fallout of apocalyptic events feels a bit near the knuckle in 2020. A few years ago, I joined a press trip to Makhachkala to see a new art exhibition and take a trip (with armed escort) into the waterfall-braided mountains. Dagestan is not really a holiday destination, even when there’s no pandemic, and a novel about Islamic radicalisation isn’t likely to encourage tourists. But Ganieva skilfully uses words from some of the 30-odd local languages and fragments of poems, fables, dreams and diaries to evoke this diverse republic sandwiched between war-torn Chechnya and the Caspian Sea. Translated by Carol Apollonio, Deep Vellum

Pushkin Hills by Sergei Dovlatov

A statue of Alexander Pushkin outside the manor house at a museum on the e Pushkin estate.

Boris Alikhanov, an alcoholic, unpublished author, finds work as a summer guide in the Pushkin Hills museum, as Dovlatov himself once did. The atmosphere of Russia’s old towns and zapovedniki (nature/heritage reserves) is conjured up in this novel, set on Alexander Pushkin’s old family estate. It’s not just the physical details that resonate (log houses girdled by birch trees, linden-shaded boulevards, old ladies selling flowers outside the monastery), but also the absurdly reverential guides and clueless tourists. The comedy of Pushkin Hills coexists with bittersweet meditations on creativity, loss and identity. Alikhanov derides Soviet authors who hanker after folk verses and embroidered towels but, explaining to his wife why he won’t emigrate, he says that while he “couldn’t care less about birch trees”, he would miss “my language, my people, my crazy country”. Translated by Katherine Dovlatov, Alma Classics

The Women of Lazarus by Marina Stepnova

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Strangers: From the author of Sunday Times bestsellers and psychological crime thrillers like Sleep comes the most gripping book of 2020

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C.L. Taylor

Strangers: From the author of Sunday Times bestsellers and psychological crime thrillers like Sleep comes the most gripping book of 2020 Kindle Edition

The sunday times bestseller and richard & judy book club author of sleep returns with her most gripping book yet..

STRANGERS: A TOP TEN SUNDAY TIMES BESTELLER

‘Fast-paced and satisfying’ DAILY MAIL ‘I was glued from start to finish!’ SHARI LAPENA

Ursula, Gareth and Alice have never met before.

Ursula thinks she killed the love of her life. Gareth’s been receiving strange postcards. And Alice is being stalked.

None of them are used to relying on others – but when the three strangers’ lives unexpectedly collide, there’s only one thing for it: they have to stick together. Otherwise, one of them will die.   Three strangers, two secrets, one terrifying evening.   The million-copy bestseller returns with a gripping new novel that will keep you guessing until the end.

  • Print length 350 pages
  • Language English
  • Sticky notes On Kindle Scribe
  • Publisher Avon
  • Publication date April 2, 2020
  • File size 1422 KB
  • Page Flip Enabled
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Sleep: The gripping crime thriller that will keep you up at night, from the million-copy bestseller

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B07WRFJV43
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Avon (April 2, 2020)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ April 2, 2020
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 1422 KB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Sticky notes ‏ : ‎ On Kindle Scribe
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 350 pages
  • #1,182 in Women's Psychological Fiction
  • #3,930 in Psychological Fiction (Kindle Store)
  • #3,954 in Fiction Urban Life

About the author

sunday times bestseller books 2020

C.L. Taylor

C.L. Taylor is an award winning Sunday Times bestselling author of ten gripping psychological thrillers including THE GUILTY COUPLE, a Richard and Judy Book Club pick for summer 2023 and SLEEP, a Richard and Judy Book Club pick for autumn 2019.

C.L. Taylor's books have sold over two million copies in the UK alone, hit number one on Amazon Kindle, Audible, Kobo, iBooks and Google Play, and have been translated into over 30 languages and optioned for TV.

Her books are not a series and can be read in any order:

2014 - THE ACCIDENT / Before I Wake (U.S. title)

2015 - THE LIE

2016 - THE MISSING

2017 - THE ESCAPE

2018 - THE FEAR

2019 - SLEEP

2020 - STRANGERS

2021 - HER LAST HOLIDAY

2022 - THE GUILTY COUPLE

2024 - EVERY MOVE YOU MAKE

She has also written two Young Adult thrillers: THE TREATMENT and THE ISLAND.

Her crime short story collection, TELL THEM NO LIES, is published as Cally Taylor. She also has a women's fiction story collection, SECRETS AND RAIN, under the same name.*

C.L. Taylor lives in Bristol in the UK with her partner and son.

*** Don't forget to click the FOLLOW button if you want Amazon to email you when CL Taylor has a new book out ***

* NB: Any short stories published on Amazon by CL Taylor are NOT published by Cally. It's an American CL Taylor.

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The week’s bestselling books, March 10

Southern California Bestsellers

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Hardcover fiction

1. The Women by Kristin Hannah (St. Martin’s Press: $30) An intimate portrait of coming of age in a dangerous time and an epic tale of a nation divided.

2. The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store by James McBride (Riverhead: $28) The discovery of a skeleton in Pottstown, Pa., opens out to a story of integration and community.

3. Wandering Stars by Tommy Orange, (Knopf, $29) Three generations of a family trace the legacy of the Sand Creek Massacre of 1864 and the Carlisle Indian Industrial School.

4. Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros (Entangled: Red Tower Books: $30) A young woman reluctantly enters a brutal dragon-riding war college in this YA fantasy.

5. North Woods by Daniel Mason (Random House: $28) A sweeping historical tale focused on a single house in the New England woods.

6. Lessons in Chemistry by Bonnie Garmus (Doubleday: $29) In the 1960s, a female chemist goes on to be a single parent, then a celebrity chef.

7. Martyr! by Kaveh Akbar (Knopf: $28) An orphaned son of Iranian immigrants embarks on a remarkable search for a family secret.

8. Iron Flame by Rebecca Yarros (Entangled: Red Tower Books: $30) In the sequel to the bestselling “Fourth Wing,” the dragon rider faces even greater tests.

9. Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin (Knopf: $28) Lifelong BFFs collaborate on a wildly successful video game.

10. After Annie by Anna Quindlen (Random House: $30) When Annie Brown dies suddenly, her husband, children and closest friend are left to find a way forward.

Hardcover nonfiction

1. The Creative Act by Rick Rubin (Penguin: $32) The music producer’s guidance on how to be a creative person.

2. Supercommunicators by Charles Duhigg (Random House: $30) An exploration of what makes conversations work.

3. The Wager by David Grann (Doubleday: $30) The story of the shipwreck of an 18th century British warship and a mutiny among the survivors.

4. Burn Book by Kara Swisher (Simon & Schuster: $30) An accounting of the tech industry and its founders who wanted to change the world but broke it instead.

5. Grief Is for People by Sloane Crosley (MCD: $27) A deeply moving and suspenseful portrait of friendship and loss.

6. How to Know a Person by David Brooks (Random House: $30) The New York Times columnist explores the power of seeing and being seen.

7. Atomic Habits by James Clear (Avery: $27) The self-help expert’s guide to building good habits and breaking bad ones via tiny changes in behavior.

8. Attack From Within by Barbara McQuade (Seven Stories Press: $35) An explanation of the ways disinformation is impacting democracy.

9. Hits, Flops, and Other Illusions by Ed Zwick (Gallery Books: $29) The filmmaker’s dishy, behind-the-scenes look at working with some of the biggest names in Hollywood.

10. Hidden Potential by Adam Grant (Viking: $32) What science tells us about how to achieve our potential.

Paperback fiction

1. A Court of Thorns and Roses by Sarah J. Maas (Bloomsbury: $19)

2. Dune by Frank Herbert (Ace: $18)

3. I Have Some Questions for You by Rebecca Makkai (Penguin Books: $19)

4. Trust by Hernan Diaz (Riverhead: $17)

5. The Midnight Library by Matt Haig (Penguin: $18)

6. A Little Life by Hanya Yanagihara (Anchor: $18)

7. Bride by Ali Hazelwood (Berkley: $19)

8. Stone Blind by Natalie Haynes (Harper Perennial: $19)

9. The Song of Achilles by Madeline Miller (Ecco: $18)

10. The Collector by Daniel Silva (Harper Paperbacks: $20)

Paperback nonfiction

1. All About Love by bell hooks (Morrow: $17)

2. The Artist’s Way by Julia Cameron (TarcherPerigee: $19)

3. The Hundred Years’ War on Palestine by Rashid Khalidi (Picador: $20)

4. Killers of the Flower Moon by David Grann (Vintage: $18)

5. Just Kids by Patti Smith (Ecco: $19)

6. Oscar Wars by Michael Schulman (Harper Paperbacks: $25)

7. An Immense World by Ed Yong (Random House: $20)

8. Crying in H Mart by Michelle Zauner (Vintage: $17)

9. Once Upon a Tome by Oliver Darkshire (W.W. Norton & Co.: $18)

10. Dopamine Nation by Dr. Anna Lembke (Dutton: $20)

More to Read

sunday times bestseller books 2020

10 books to add to your reading list in March

Feb. 1, 2024

Souther California Bestsellers

The week’s bestselling books, March 3

Feb. 28, 2024

The week’s bestselling books, Feb. 25

Feb. 21, 2024

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The Los Angeles Times bestsellers list comes courtesy of the California Independent Booksellers Alliance (CALIBA). Established in 1981, CALIBA is a mutual benefit 501c(6) nonprofit corporation dedicated to supporting, nurturing and promoting independent retail bookselling in California.

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Advertisement

Paul Whelan, American Imprisoned in Russia, Is Seen in New Video

In footage posted by the state-owned network RT, he is shown in several settings, including in a cafeteria. Mr. Whelan has been largely out of sight since he was convicted by a Russian court in 2020.

  • Share full article

Paul Whelan, wearing glasses and in a gray sweater, is seen through the bars of a cage for defendants before a hearing in Moscow in 2020.

By Jesus Jiménez

  • Published Aug. 28, 2023 Updated Aug. 29, 2023

Paul Whelan, an American imprisoned in Russia, appeared in a video released on Monday by a Kremlin-backed news network, giving his family a chance to see him for the first time in three years.

Mr. Whelan, a former Marine serving a 16-year sentence on what U.S. officials say are bogus espionage charges, has been largely out of sight since he was convicted by a Russian court in June 2020, although he has been visited by Western diplomats.

In the video posted by RT — a state-owned English-language network previously known as Russia Today — Mr. Whelan is seen in several settings, including eating in a cafeteria. He appeared to be in good health and declined an interviewer’s request to ask him questions.

In an email to supporters, Mr. Whelan’s twin brother, David, said that Monday “was the first time I’ve seen what he really looks like since June 2020.”

“So thank you, Russia Today, because although your reporting is the worst sort of propaganda and you are the mouthpiece for war criminals, at least I could see what Paul looks like after all of these years,” he wrote.

David Whelan said the video was recorded in May. He added that his brother previously informed their parents that prison officials had punished him for his refusal to participate in the interview, including by taking some of his clothing.

Karine Jean-Pierre, the White House press secretary, said at a news briefing on Tuesday that “it was reassuring to see that he remains — and this is to use his brother’s words — ‘unbowed.’”

“Paul continues to show tremendous courage,” Ms. Jean-Pierre said. “That does not change that his circumstance are truly unacceptable, and we will continue to be very clear about that. Russia should release him immediately.”

President Biden has said he is working to secure the release of Mr. Whelan. The State Department tried for months to include him in the deal that freed the W.N.B.A. star Brittney Griner, who was arrested in a Russian airport shortly before the invasion of Ukraine and later pleaded guilty to drug charges.

Ms. Griner was released in December in exchange for Viktor Bout , a notorious Russian arms dealer known as the “Merchant of Death.”

Aside from diplomatic visits, communication by Mr. Whelan, a corporate security executive, has been limited to phone calls and a phone interview that he did with CNN in May .

Mr. Whelan, 53, and Evan Gershkovich — an American reporter from The Wall Street Journal arrested in March, also on espionage charges — have been designated by the United States as “wrongfully detained,” which means they are essentially considered political hostages.

David Whelan said in an interview in April that he would “be happy for the U.S. government to make whatever concessions they can to bring Paul home.”

Jesus Jiménez is a general assignment reporter. More about Jesus Jiménez

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  10. Life's What You Make It: The Sunday Times Bestseller 2020

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  11. Life's What You Make It : The Sunday Times Bestseller 2020

    THE SUNDAY TIMES BESTSELLER 'Searingly honest, brave, highly readable' Sunday Express '[A] fantastic read on such an interesting life' Lorraine Kelly ... Penguin Books Limited, 2020: ISBN: 1405949139, 9781405949132: Length: 416 pages: Subjects: Performing Arts › Television › Genres ›

  12. Hardcover Fiction Books

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  13. List of The New York Times number-one books of 2020

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  14. Sunday Times Bestsellers 2020

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  15. Bestsellers List Sunday, Dec. 20, 2020

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  16. Amazon.co.uk: Sunday Times Bestsellers: Books

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  19. 10 of the best novels set in Russia

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  21. Weekend Edition Saturday for March 2, 2024 : NPR

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