Not a recent publication ...
finally decided to read Cryptonomicon by Neal Stephenson.
Reread the Bad Twin because it's the last of LOST.
Every so often I sit down and read a whole book at Borders where I don't have a lot of "things I should be doing" pulling at me.
A very interesting book I picked up and read cover to cover there was "Dangerous Waters: Modern Piracy and Terror on the High Seas" by John S. Burnett. It's mostly about piracy in the busiest shipping lane in the world - the Malacca Straits, but it's also about the threat of pirates and terrorism to supertankers. The author was a victim of piracy himself and then took a voyage on a supertanker and observed the concern with piracy first hand - mixed with information on the topic. A good read.
Amazon link:
http://www.amazon.com/Dangerous-Waters-M...0525946799
I also read The Lost Symbol by Dan Brown at Borders - but it took me a second sitting to finish it. His books are better than the movies. Probably my favorite of the three I've read.
For lightweight reading, I read "Smile When You're Lying" by Chuck Thompson. It's an expose of the travel writing industry peppered with good stories, is very irreverent, and is one of those books you can pick at a chapter at a time.
Speaking of travel lit, anyone who hasn't read Maarten J. Troost, you are missing some good laughs.
"Sex Lives of Cannibals (Kiribati)" "Getting Stoned with Savages" (Vanuatu and Fiji) are my favorites.