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What's been on your TBR the longest?
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Trying to remember to be gracious and that this isn't an attack on my person. I choose kindness! XD
I think I've read most of the books I meant to read from my pre-internet days, with the exception of The Oathbound Wizard which I found in my dad's library, started and then haven't picked up again in uh...25 years?
Not sure if I have any real intention of getting to it, but I've remembered it this long so I think safe to say it's preying on my mind.
I guess I should read some of my spouse's nonfiction he likes and keeps citing >:( But I don't wanna. So then by GR count, my longest held onto books are Furies of Calderon and like all the UF ever.
I think I've read most of the books I meant to read from my pre-internet days, with the exception of The Oathbound Wizard which I found in my dad's library, started and then haven't picked up again in uh...25 years?
Not sure if I have any real intention of getting to it, but I've remembered it this long so I think safe to say it's preying on my mind.
I guess I should read some of my spouse's nonfiction he likes and keeps citing >:( But I don't wanna. So then by GR count, my longest held onto books are Furies of Calderon and like all the UF ever.

I surely have way older ones on my brain-TBR, but today is not the day to poke that bear.



The Eyes of Heisenberg by Frank Herbert

Nightwings by Robert Silverberg

A Midsummer Tempest by Poul Anderson

The Beginning Place by Ursula K. Le Guin

Starship & Haiku by S.P. Somtow

Zarsthor's Bane by Andre Norton purchased July 14, 2012
The Jargoon Pard by Andre Norton purchased July 14, 2012
and a bunch of other Andre Norton books purchased around the same date.
The first three will fulfill some of the Challenges this year (J & Z in the Alphabet Title Challenge and Brett's series is set to fulfill the Fantasy block in the Series Challenge. Andre Norton, I'm slowly working my way through.



That will be on next year's TBR clean.

Gabi, old covers are great and there's just something about them that takes me back to certain times of my life. Not nostalgia necessarily, more like memories that only rarely come out from long-term storage to the front of my mind.

Gonna post the actual old covers/German editions I have:
























On a positive note, I read City of Pearl and Six Wakesthis year and they've been on my tbr list for years.

I have the bookclub version too!

The oldest appears to be The Glass Teat: Essays of Opinion on the Subject of Television


The Birthday of the World and Other Stories
Diving into the Wreck
Gunpowder Moon
and some stuff from all those bundle sales like Saffron and Brimstone: Strange Stories

I really really want to read the seven primary books in The League of Peoples series. I own them all, and have read some... but to set aside a month or two to read them all *and* allow time to savor and digest each before moving forward has been nigh on impossible since, erm, 2008.
Oh, which reminds me, I also own the complete Animorphs collection, but I suppose that doesn't count because when they were new my older sons were the right age and we all read all of them.

I have to wonder if I really don’t want “to read” these at all.

I am listening to The Prancing Pony Podcast, which tackles The Silmarillion one chapter or part of a chapter at a time early in its run. It will take longer than just reading the book cover to cover, but you get thoughtful analysis and friendly banter that may make the book come alive for you a bit more.
All of my TBR got loaded to Goodreads a relatively short time ago, but I have been interested in The Eye of the World by Robert Jordan for a long time, and I even have it on my Kindle from when Tor gave it out for free one month.


others are:
Interview with the Vampire
want to read all of Anne Rice's Vampire Chronicles
Hidden Empire
The Mists of Avalon
Ender's Game
Lord Foul's Bane
Wizard's First Rule
Leviathan Wakes

Hominids by Sawyer

The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet by Chambers

The Fifth Season by Jemisin

Arkwright by Steele



The last Shannara book I read was Talismans, literally like the eighth book of the series, published (and read) in 1993, and I've spent the last nearly 30 years (!!!!) fully intending to continue the series, and just never did. I've re-read the original trilogy at least once in that time.
I read Tad Williams' Dragonbone Chair in 2001 or 2002, and just never continued the series, though again, I've always intended to, and even now I still intend to (though by now a re-read of the first book will be required).
I was into fantasy long before I got into sci-fi, and at some point in the last 10-15 years that dynamic shifted completely, and I haven't been into fantasy as much. So most of the books that have been on my TBR the longest will be fantasy. I started reading fantasy in 7th or 8th grade with Shannara and the Drizzt series. I think it was college before I started getting into sci-fi.
EDIT: How could I forget Stephen King's Dark Tower series. I think I first read Gunslinger in the late 80's/early 90's, and never continued, though I have always intended to, and still do. I've reread Gunslinger at least a few times since then in an effort to build momentum, and I always fail.
Hopefully this year's the year to at least make progress though because the second book is on my alphabet challenge list this year so no excuses.


The Best of Henry Kuttner

The Well of the Unicorn

The Blue Star

Incarnate



The Aquinas is a full backlog all by itself, by my reckoning!
The non-fiction that's been on my bookshelf the longest are:

recommended by a college professor, iirc. it was too difficult the first time I tried, and I've been holding onto it against the day I was ready for it.



Like Randy, I also have an unread copy of


https://www.amazon.com/b?node=1749591...
and it worked on both my linked accounts

The Lady Astronaut of Mars
To Say Nothing of the Dog
Man Plus
We Need to Talk About Kevin
...
I now feel like this should be fixed STAT. It sounds like easy enough an idea...


I think you can look at all and sort by the added date (oldest to newest) and get your oldest unread



Chronicles of the Black Company - Added it to my TBR back in 2010. I have the physical copy on my bookshelf and already tried starting it a few times over the years, but I always lose interest after a few chapters.


Red Mars

I've started this more than once. Only excuse is that once it was a copy at someone else's place, so I couldn't bring it home. Later I owned the paperback for 15 years. Never finished it. My screensaver is of the planet Mars. I hope to live long enough to see a colony on Mars. Dumbest thing ever that I have not read the entire award-winning trilogy.
When Gravity Fails

Picked it up many times, had it recommended many times... never grabbed me enough. Now I even own a copy.
Neuromancer

Finally finally finally, I made it through. This month. I have read it!
Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?

Inspiration for fave movie Bladerunner! Why not read the book? Yes, WHY NOT?
1984

When people say in a shocked voice 'You haven't read 1984?!' my stock answer is 'In our high school we did the other one, Brave New World ' so it doesn't sound as bad.
I had the Eurythmics soundtrack even though I haven't seen the movie either. This is foundational stuff right? Resonant to the times. The Party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command.
I need to read it, and I *am* going to read it... just haven't gotten to it yet.


..."
Ok, of books I intend to read, known in my mind, I've had War of the Worlds on my shelf for nearly 1/2 century. For example.
But I have gotten around to Around the World in Eighty Days (not very good), Invisible Man (pretty cool), The Time Machine (disappointing), Frankenstein (yeah, not quite what I expected, but very good), Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (again, so different, not in themes so much but in presentation), and Brave New World (different and richer than I expected).


Thank you. I will try harder to prioritize this. :)


Read no more than one a week. A surfeit would sicken, as the saying goes.

Words of Science and the History Behind Them. About time I got to it I think:)


Words of Science and the History Behind Them. About time I got to it I think:)
[bookcover:Words of Science and..."
Ok, you might have me beat with that one! I hope it's worth the wait!
Books mentioned in this topic
Words of Science and the History Behind Them (other topics)Words of Science and the History Behind Them (other topics)
Neuromancer (other topics)
Red Mars (other topics)
When Gravity Fails (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Harlan Ellison (other topics)Peter V. Brett (other topics)
Andre Norton (other topics)
Robert Silverberg (other topics)
Poul Anderson (other topics)
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These are mine. They've all been on my bookshelf since the mid-'80s at least. The pictured covers are the editions I own.
(sorry, Allison! it's the one that first came to mind!)
(I read the first one of these three or four years ago. it was okay. notable for being musty as eff from sitting on my parents' bookshelf since I was in high school.)
(owned since the '80s, and this edition is from the '60s. venerable!)
Lucky me, I can clear three SFFBC books from my checklist once I actually get around to reading them!
Oldest e-book:
(I picked this one up not long after I got my first e-reader in 2010, and later discovered that it's part of an ongoing setting that includes at least one prior series. which I haven't yet read, so I guess it's going to moulder out in the cloud for some time yet.)