FICTION
1. Fool Me Once, by Harlan Coben. (Dutton) A retired Army helicopter pilot faces combat-related nightmares and mysteries concerning the deaths of her husband and sister.
2. Private Paris, by James Patterson and Mark Sullivan. (Little, Brown) Jack Morgan, head of a global investigative agency, probes murders of the French cultural elite.
3. The Nest, by Cynthia D'Aprix Sweeney. (Ecco/HarperCollins) Siblings in a dysfunctional family grapple with a reduced inheritance.
4. Property of a Noblewoman, by Danielle Steel. (Delacorte) Two New Yorkers reconstruct the history of a young woman and a love affair at the time of World War II.
5. All the Light We Cannot See, by Anthony Doerr. (Scribner) The lives of a blind French girl and a gadget-obsessed German boy before and during World War II.
6. The Girl on the Train, by Paula Hawkins. (Riverhead) A psychological thriller set in the environs of London. (x)
7. The Summer Before the War, by Helen Simonson. (Random House) Life in Sussex, England, at the beginning of World War I.
8. The Nightingale, by Kristin Hannah. (St. Martin's) Two sisters in World War II France: one struggling to survive in the countryside, the other joining the Resistance in Paris.