The Book Queue, 2012 Edition

The last list I posted, back in July 2011, had 15 books on it. I’ve made some excellent process, clearing out almost all of the “Holdovers” from previous lists, including some books that have been sitting on my shelf for literally years. The one remainder from that list is Godel, Escher, Bach, which I chose not to read due to its length (not sure if I’ll tackle it this year either, but it will remain in the queue until I do!) I’ve actually read several books that weren’t even in the queue, but I think it’s time to regroup and look ahead to what I’ll be reading in 2012. The first few books here are holdovers from the previous list, which I didn’t read for various reasons.

  • Godel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid by Douglas R. Hofstadter: Again, not sure I want to tackle this one right away, as it’s quite the lengthy tome. And it’s not super easy reading either – it’s dense, complex stuff. I’ve actually read the first chapter or so before, and I’m virtually certain I’ll enjoy the book a great deal, but I’ve got a ton of other stuff I’d like to get through first.
  • Komarr, A Civil Campaign, Diplomatic Immunity, and Cryoburn by Lois McMaster Bujuld – These are the last 4 books in Bujold’s long running Vorkosigan Saga, a series I cracked open last year, plowing through the first 10 installments. I’m told that these next few books are some of the most fun in the series, so I’m already looking forward to them (and dreading that I won’t be able to fall back on reading Vorkosigan novels)
  • The Children of the Sky by Vernor Vinge: I still want to read this (a continuation of Vinge’s loosely linked Zones of Thought books), but initial reviews of this book seem to indicate that it ends on a cliffhanger and that another novel is forthcoming. I thus won’t be reading this until I know more about when the presumed conclusion to the story will be available…
  • The Quantum Thief by Hannu Rajaniemi: I actually ordered this last year, but for some strange reason, Amazon could not fulfill the order (it had something to do with my ordering of the paperback version, which is apparently nonstandard or something). I do still want to read it though (it’s appaently a SF heist story, which seems right up my alley), and now that I have a Kindle, I can probably get to this whenever I want…
  • Savage Season by Joe R. Lansdale: The first in a series of crime novels by Lansdale, whom you may know from his work on Bubba Ho-Tep (a book/movie where a black JFK and an old Elvis fight a mummy in a modern-day Texas retirement home). I just never got to this last year, but I don’t see myself delaying anytime soon.
  • Where Good Ideas Come From: The Natural History of Innovation by Steven Johnson: I really enjoyed Johnson’s Everything Bad is Good for You: How Today’s Popular Culture is Actually Making Us Smarter, but I’ve never read any of his other stuff… until now. Or until I read this one, which is already sitting on my shelf.
  • Theodore Rex by Edmund Morris – I gave this biography of Theodore Roosevelt to my uncle as a gift a while ago, and he though I’d like it too, so now it’s in the queue. The biography apparently begins with Roosevelt’s taking office (i.e. no getting bogged down with his childhood and upraising, it just goes straight to the action). It is a long book with small type and everything, but it’s probably something I’ll get through this year.
  • Foreigner by C. J. Cherryh – I’ve actually started reading this one already, so you can see that this book queue works in mysterious ways and that I certainly won’t be reading this stuff in order. In any case, this is apparently the first in another long-running series about humans first encounter with aliens. So far, it’s quite good, though I’m a little discombobulated by how the narrative keeps jumping ahead. From what I can tell, the series gets much better as it goes…

So there’s 11 books I want to read this year. My goal is to do just as good as the 30 I read last year, if not improve on that a little. I also got a Kindle for Christmas, which means I could maybe do more reading on the go. Or not. We’ll see. I’m going to be keeping track of progress on GoodReads, so feel free to follow along or friend me or whatever.