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Group:  Bestsellers over the Years ignore
Topic:  2000 0 / 25 read

Nov 23, 2007, 11:11am (top)Message 1: varielle

In July of this year children's books were moved off into their own category.

1. The Brethren by John Grisham. Doubleday (2/00) **2,875,000 total sales 1,834 copies on LT
2. The Mark: The Beast Rules the World by Jerry B. Jenkins and Tim LaHaye. Tyndale House (11/00) 2,613,087 total sales 574 copies on LT
3. The Bear and the Dragon by Tom Clancy. Putnam (8/00) 2,130,793 total sales 1,197 copies on LT
4. The Indwelling: The Beast Takes Possession by Jerry B. Jenkins and Tim LaHaye. Tyndale House (5/00) 1,993,694 total sales 583 copies on LT
5. The Last Precinct by Patricia Cornwell. Putnam (10/00) 1,144,105 total sales 1,039 copies on LT
6. Journey by Danielle Steel. Dell (10/00) **975,000 total sales 86 copies on LT.
7. The Rescue by Nicholas Sparks. Warner (9/00) 909,597 total sales 720 copies on LT
8. Rose Are Red by James Patterson. Little, Brown (11/00) 854,906 total sales 904 copies on LT
9. Cradle and All by James Patterson. Little, Brown (5/00) 763,321 total sales 608 copies on LT
10. The House on Hope Street by Danielle Steel. Dell (6/00)**750,000 total sales 96 copies on LT

Boy, those Danielle Steel books sure do disappear in a hurry don't they? *She says smugly having never read one and with no intention to start*

Can't get the touchstone for Roses are Red.

Message edited by its author, Nov 23, 2007, 11:18am.

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Nov 23, 2007, 11:26am (top)Message 2: fleela

I've never even heard of any of these titles.
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Nov 23, 2007, 3:18pm (top)Message 3: geneg

I read both The Mark and The Indwelling. This is about the time this series jumped the shark so-to-speak.
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Nov 23, 2007, 4:27pm (top)Message 4: raggedtig

A swing and a miss for the year 2000. Even with the Danielle Steel book. LOL Wow, I think that's a first for me. YAY
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Nov 23, 2007, 7:58pm (top)Message 5: Shortride

I read the The Mark and The Indwelling as well.
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Nov 23, 2007, 9:34pm (top)Message 6: aviddiva

Only The Last Precinct for me...
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Nov 25, 2007, 11:35pm (top)Message 7: vpfluke

One book not on the list is Dan Brown's Angels and Demons. This came out in 2000, and was not a bestseller in any week of that year. But it became a big seller after The Da Vinci Code was published a couple of years later. It is ranked 21st in LT and hmore owned than iany of the official Year 2000 best sellers.

There was only one reason to take children's books off the bestseller's list, and that was the dominance of the Harry Potter books. I think maybe 4 were on the list at the same time, before the change ws made. The first six are 1-6 in LT, and HP7 is slowly making its way up, now #14. "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows" is the most reviewed book on LT at 516 reviews. USA Today's besteller list puts everything together, all fiction and non-fiction, paper and hardback (and Harry Potter).

Also, perennial books like Pride and Prejudice are considered "Evergreens", no matter how many copies are sold.

Message edited by its author, Nov 25, 2007, 11:42pm.

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Nov 26, 2007, 11:29am (top)Message 8: Bookmarque

Zip. Nada.
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Jan 3, 2008, 8:54am (top)Message 9: andyray

where did this list come from again? I shudder to believe that this list represents the best and brightest of our literary efforts in this country for a whole year!!!

and has anyone met anyone who has READ anything by Danielle Steele? Does she really exist? I think it's a sweat shop of speed freaks all working in concert in a basement on the lower east side of New York.
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Jan 3, 2008, 9:14am (top)Message 10: varielle

I believe this one came from Publisher's Weekly. These really are so bad it makes you fear for the future of the country.
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Jan 3, 2008, 11:05am (top)Message 11: vpfluke

Well, this lists shows what happens when Harry Potter and evergreen books aren't on the list. There is I think a fairly good breadth of books if you could look at the top 50 or 100. The bestsellers listed above were the fodder for 2003 and 2004 used book sales. Now that it is 2008, they are becoming forgotten.
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Jan 3, 2008, 3:55pm (top)Message 12: aviddiva

Alas, I knew someone who worked for Danielle Steele. She is all too real...
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Feb 8, 2008, 8:26pm (top)Message 13: HelloAnnie

The year I got married and didn't manage to read a one of those, nor do they look particularly interesting.
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Apr 14, 2008, 9:08pm (top)Message 14: deniro

I wonder how wealthy Steele is. She must be doing something right. Whether those books endure…
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Apr 15, 2008, 12:03am (top)Message 15: Shortride

Wikipedia says over $600 million.
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Apr 23, 2008, 3:47pm (top)Message 16: keren7

I haven't read any of these either - and I also refuse to read a Danielle Steele
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Apr 24, 2008, 7:39pm (top)Message 17: oregonobsessionz

What an awful selection! The nonfiction list is marginally better, but I haven't read any of these either.

1. 9 Steps to Financial Freedom: Practical and Spiritual Steps So You Can Stop Worrying by Suze Orman (462 copies on LT)

2. America's Queen: The Life of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis by Sarah Bradford (89 copies)

3. American Rhapsody by Joe Eszterhas (69 copies on LT)

4. And the Crowd Goes Wild: Relive the Most Celebrated Sporting Events Ever Broadcast by Joe Garner (72 copies on LT)

5. The Arrogance of Power: The Secret World of Richard Nixon by Anthony Summers and Robbyn Swan (no author touchstones) (100 copies on LT)

6. The Art of Happiness: A Handbook for Living by the Dalai Lama (no touchstone?!) and Howard C. Cutler (1240 copies on LT)

7. As Nature Made Him: The Boy Who Was Raised as a Girl by John Colapinto (341 copies on LT)

8. The Beatles Anthology by The Beatles (531 copies on LT)

9. Black Mass: The Irish Mob, the FBI, and a Devil's Deal by Dick Lehr and Gerard O'Neill (121 copies on LT)

10. Blackbird: A Childhood Lost and Found by Jennifer Lauck (224 copies on LT)
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Apr 25, 2008, 3:46pm (top)Message 18: varielle

I recently finished a psychology class on human sexuality in which As Nature Made Him was a big topic of discussion. What a complete unnecessary tragedy that entire event was. Truly heartbreaking. I don't think I could bear to read it.
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Apr 25, 2008, 9:08pm (top)Message 19: vpfluke

Here is Publisher Weekly's non-fiction list for year 2000:

Nonfiction

1. Who Moved My Cheese? by Spencer Johnson, Putnam

2. Guinness World Records 2001, Guinness Publishing

3. Body for Life by Bill Phillips, HarperCollins

4. Tuesdays with Morrie by Mitch Albom, Doubleday

5. The Beatles Anthology by The Beatles, Chronicle

6. The OReilly Factor by Bill O'Reilly, Broadway

7. Relationship Rescue by Dr. Phil McGraw, Hyperion

8. The Millionaire Mind by Thomas J. Stanley, Andrews McMeel

9. Ten Things I Wish Id Known—Before I Went Out into the Real World by Maria Shriver, Warner

10. Eating Well for Optimum Health by Andrew Weil, M.D., Knopf

11. The Prayer of Jabez by Bruce Wilkinson, Multnomah

12. Flags of Our Fathers by James Bradley with Ron Powers, Bantam

13. A Short Guide to a Happy Life by Anna Quindlen, Random House

14. On Writing by Stephen King, Scribner

15. Nothing Like It in the World by Stephen E. Ambrose, Simon & Schuster
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Apr 25, 2008, 9:08pm (top)Message 20: vpfluke

Here is Publisher Weekly's non-fiction list for year 2000:

Nonfiction

1. Who Moved My Cheese? by Spencer Johnson, Putnam

2. Guinness World Records 2001, Guinness Publishing

3. Body for Life by Bill Phillips, HarperCollins

4. Tuesdays with Morrie by Mitch Albom, Doubleday

5. The Beatles Anthology by The Beatles, Chronicle

6. The OReilly Factor by Bill O'Reilly, Broadway

7. Relationship Rescue by Dr. Phil McGraw, Hyperion

8. The Millionaire Mind by Thomas J. Stanley, Andrews McMeel

9. Ten Things I Wish Id Known—Before I Went Out into the Real World by Maria Shriver, Warner

10. Eating Well for Optimum Health by Andrew Weil, M.D., Knopf

11. The Prayer of Jabez by Bruce Wilkinson, Multnomah

12. Flags of Our Fathers by James Bradley with Ron Powers, Bantam

13. A Short Guide to a Happy Life by Anna Quindlen, Random House

14. On Writing by Stephen King, Scribner

15. Nothing Like It in the World by Stephen E. Ambrose, Simon & Schuster
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Apr 25, 2008, 9:37pm (top)Message 21: rdurick

The Prayer of Jabez was one of two most disturbing books that I mentioned in the most disturbing books group. The greed and self-absorption, the notion of manipulating God to one's own end, it angrifies me yet.

Robert

Message edited by its author, Apr 25, 2008, 9:38pm.

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Apr 25, 2008, 10:02pm (top)Message 22: vpfluke

My Touchstones were dancing over the page, so I have to put numbers in a separate message for the books listed in Message 21. The numbers are the # of LTers owning the book, the number of reviews, and the rank of thbook of all books in LT.

1. 1698 - 21 - 1035
2. 86 - 2 - 39488
3. 420 - 5 - 6194
4. 4847 - 92 - 183
5. 530 - 4 - 4578
6. 219 - 5 - 13705
7. 172 - 3 - 18150
8. 276 - 5 - 10616
9. 107 - 1 - 30690
10. 250 - 2 - 11746
11. 924 - 5 - 2234
12. 875 - 13 - 2414
13. 276 - 4 - 10518
14. 4438 - 77 - 208
15. 671 - 6 - 3394

Stephen King's (#14) Book On Writing : a memoir of the craft has the wrong Touchstone above. It's ranked just behind "Tuesdays with Morrie: an old man, a young man, and life's greatest lesson." I didn't read Mitch Albom's book because I wasn't particularly drawn to his sports writing in the Detroit Free Press when I lived in Detroit. But I did read his The Five People You Meet in Heaven. Albom writes for people who want religion in a non-institutional form. But myself, I am into institutional religion (Episcopal), so I understand the sentiment, but maybe follow a different path.
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Apr 27, 2008, 5:35am (top)Message 23: Shortride

For nonfiction, Tuesdays with Morrie and The O'Reilly Factor (on audiobook). Neither of them were particularly memorable.

For fiction, The Brethren, The Mark, and The Indwelling. For me, the Left Behind books fell subject to the law of diminishing returns, and I gave up on the series after Glorious Appearing

Message edited by its author, Apr 27, 2008, 5:41am.

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Apr 27, 2008, 5:36am (top)Message 24: Shortride

This message has been deleted by its author.
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Apr 28, 2008, 12:08pm (top)Message 25: keren7

I have read and own Who moved my cheese and Tuesdays with Morrie.
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Touchstone works

Touchstone authors

Mitch Albom
Stephen E. Ambrose
Jane Austen
The Beatles
Bill Phillips
Sarah Bradford
James Bradley
Dan Brown
Tom Clancy
John Colapinto
Patricia Cornwell
Howard C. Cutler
Dr. Phil McGraw
Joe Eszterhas
Joe Garner
John Grisham
Jerry B. Jenkins
Spencer Johnson
Stephen King
Tim LaHaye
Tenzin Gyatso
Jennifer Lauck
Dick Lehr
Phillip C. McGraw
Bill O'Reilly
Suze Orman
James Patterson
Bill Phillips
Detroit Free Press
Alice Provensen
Quindlen
Anna Quindlen
Guinness World Records
Maria Shriver
Nicholas Sparks
Guinness Staff
Thomas J. Stanley
Danielle Steel
Ambrose E. Stephen
Anthony Summers
Mark Twain
Andrew Weil
Bruce Wilkinson
William Knowlton Zinsser
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