In the January 5 PW, we mixed up some numbers in the text accompanying the chart on page 5. When we compared the 2003 numbers for nonfiction with 2002 and 2001, we inadvertently used fiction totals. In an attempt to straighten out the confusion, here are the last five years of total unit sales for the top five hardcover fiction and nonfiction bestsellers at the three major chains—Barnes & Noble, Borders and Waldenbooks—during the holiday season (Thanksgiving weekend through Christmas). Fiction: 1,678,660 for 2003; 878,947 for 2002; 863,926 for 2001; 540,638 for 2000; and 654,238 for 1999. Clearly, 2003 set a new record. A major factor was The Da Vinci Code, which broke all weekly sales records for a fiction hardcover top seller; The Five People You Meet in Heaven came in second. In nonfiction, the tallies were: 779,081 in 2003; 654,094 in 2002; 635,529 in 2001; 847,115 in 2000; and 1,555,159 in 1999. Again, the 2003 numbers were better than the previous two years, but nowhere near those of 1999, when nonfiction bestsellers such as Tuesdays with Morrie, The Greatest Generation and The Greatest Generation Speaks enjoyed record holiday sales.