"Battlestar Galactica": Starbuck fears she's beginning to lose her sanity as she wrestles with horrific memories. 10 p.m., The Sci Fi Channel.
Sunday, March 4
"The Winner": Rob Corddry stars in this new comedy about a grown man who lives with his parents. 8 p.m., Fox.
"Aryan Brotherhood": This documentary takes a rare inside look at the gang that operates inside prisons all over the nation and controls rackets that extend beyond jailhouse walls. 8 p.m., National Geographic Channel.
Monday, March 5
"Inside North Korea": A TV crew posed as a medical team to get a look inside North Korea, a totalitarian state that has little contact with the outside world and where dictator Kim Jong Il holds absolute power and tells his people that he is a god. 9 p.m., National Geographic Channel.
Tuesday, March 6
"House": Dave Matthews guest stars as a brain-damaged musical savant who needs House's help. 9 p.m., Fox.
Wednesday, March 7
"Wedding Bells": Three sisters (KaDee Strickland, Sarah Jones and Teri Polo) try to run the wedding emporium they've inherited from their parents while also trying to sort out their own love lives. From producer David E. Kelley ("Ally McBeal"). 9 p.m., Fox.
BOOKS:
Maeve Binchy, "Whitethorn Woods": Binchy's latest novel concerns characters living in a small Irish town who tell their own stories as a highway project threatens to demolish the town's obscure, unofficial shrine. Published by Knopf. In stores March 6.
Benjamin Black (aka John Banville), "Christine Falls": Booker Prize-winning author Banville adopts the pseudonym Benjamin Black for this thriller set in 1950s Ireland about a pathologist whose investigation into the death of a young maid exposes a network of corruption that reaches into the Catholic Church and his own family. Published by Henry Holt & Company. In stores March 6.
Jodi Picoult, "Nineteen Minutes: A Novel": A judge ponders the case of a bullied boy who becomes a mass murderer during a Columbine-like rampage at his high school. Published by Simon & Schuster. In stores March 6.
Gene Wilder, "My French Whore": The first novel from actor Wilder concerns a young man serving in the U.S. Army during World War I who assumes the identity of a German spy and gets access - for a time, at least - to an astonishing world of privilege. Published by St. Martin's Press. In stores March 6.



















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