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Top Paid Books (US Bestseller List)

1. Judge Stone by James Patterson & Viola Davis (Little, Brown and Company)

2. Theo of Golden by Allen Levi (Atria Books)

3. Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir (Random House Publishing Group)

4. The Dark Time by Nick Petrie (Penguin Publishing Group)

5. The 48 Laws of Power by Joost Elffers & Robert Greene (Penguin Publishing Group)

6. The Correspondent by Virginia Evans (Crown)

7. Felicia’s Favorites by Danielle Steel (Random House Publishing Group)

8. Rules of the Game by Nora Roberts (St. Martin’s Publishing Group)

9. The Crossroads by C. J. Box (Penguin Publishing Group)

10. Apple by David Pogue (Simon & Schuster)

Top Paid Audiobooks (US Bestseller List)

1. Project Hail Mary (Unabridged) by Andy Weir (Audible)

2. Judge Stone by James Patterson & Viola Davis (Hachette Audio )

3. Dear Debbie by Freida McFadden (Dreamscape Media)

4. Theo of Golden (Unabridged) by Allen Levi (Simon & Schuster Digital Sales…)

5. Stripped Down by Bunnie Xo (HarperCollins Publishers )

6. You with the Sad Eyes by Christina Applegate (Hachette Audio )

7. Reminders of Him: A Novel (Unabridged) by Colleen Hoover (Audible)

8. The Correspondent: A Novel (Unabridged) by Virginia Evans (Penguin Random House, LLC)

9. Quicksilver by Callie Hart (Podium Publishing SubCo LLC)

10. Dungeon Crawler Carl: A LitRPG/Gamelit Adventure (Unabridged) by Matt Dinniman (Audible)

Ten years later, the cult of ‘The Nice Guys’ keeps growing

NEW YORK (AP) — When “The Nice Guys” debuted 10 years ago, the writing was on the wall for the big-screen comedy. It came out sandwiched between “Captain America: Civil War” and “X-Men: Apocalypse.” It opened against “Angry Birds.” The cartoon birds, Ryan Gosling has lamented, “just destroyed us.” “They’re just so angry,” Gosling once sighed. And yet, marking its upcoming 10th anniversary this month, “The Nice Guys” has established itself as one of the most beloved comedies of the last decade — a decade in which Hollywood studios largely left the genre for dead. A 1970s-set comic noir directed and co-written by Shane Black, “The Nice Guys” paired Gosling and Russell Crowe as private eyes in a Los Angeles crime caper that, a decade later, keeps getting better. “There’s a lot of interest in ‘The Nice Guys’ today that wasn’t there when it opened. And the box office will attest to that,” Black deadpanned in a recent interview. “But people find these things. I think there’s kind of a joy of finding a movie on streaming or rental and then suddenly kind of realizing: How did I miss this? And ‘The Nice Guys’ was easy to miss.”
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