Here’s a look at what’s new on USA TODAY’s Best-Selling Books list…

He's 'Dangerous': Dangerous, Milo Yiannopoulos’ self-published far-right manifesto, lands at No. 3 this week. (The full list will be published on Thursday.)

The controversial Yiannopoulos was forced to publish Dangerous under the label Dangerous Books after Simon & Schuster canceled his book deal in February.

The publisher, already under fire for what critics called a “hate speech” book, dumped Dangerous after a podcast emerged that seemed to show Yiannopoulos condoning sex between men and boys. He resigned from Breitbart News and has since said he does not condone pedophilia.

On July 7, three days after he released Dangerous, Yiannopoulos sued Simon & Schuster for $10 million, claiming the publisher “wrongfully, and in bad faith, terminated the contract.”

Simon & Schuster said it would “vigorously defend itself” and “fully expects to prevail in court.”

In my ** (out of four stars) review, I said that while the flamboyant Yiannopoulous can be funny at times, in Dangerous he’s “practicing a brand of free speech that's a license to offend and demean.”

This week, the hardcover edition was “temporarily out of stock” on Amazon and Barnes & Noble’s web sites. The book is also available digitally.

'Island' hopping: John Grisham’s Camino Island (Doubleday) is turning out to be the big hit of the summer. The colorful novel, about the heist of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s manuscripts from Princeton, returns to No. 1 this week.

This marks the fourth week Camino Island has held the top spot. It landed on the list at No. 1 on June 15 and held firm for two more weeks before dropping to No. 3 last week.

Only one other book has been No. 1 for four weeks this year: The Shack by William P. Young. Propelled by a movie adaptation, it had a run of four consecutive weeks at the top in March.

In June, Grisham went on his first book tour in 25 years to promote Camino Island, an unusual summer thriller for the author. The novel is set in the world of rare-book collecting and centers on a roguish Florida bookseller.