Barber's Bookstore

Barber's Bookstore Oldest bookstore in the state. We are one of the last independent bookstores in Tarrant County. One of the last independent book shops in Tarrant County.
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Family owned. General stock used & rare. At this location since before 1940. We buy old books.

Tales not from Texas  #35: What was maslin? Yeah so about 50 years ago, thanks to the generosity of my parents, I had th...
05/23/2026

Tales not from Texas #35: What was maslin? Yeah so about 50 years ago, thanks to the generosity of my parents, I had the pleasure of living 5 months in London. I worked at Foyle's Bookstore on Charing Cross Road so of course I had no money. So free public events fit my budget. I was sitting on the grass one evening in a small park. Some kind singers were regaling us with selections from opera. They were performing from the ruin of an ancient building which served as a stage of sorts. A woman in her early thirties stepped forward and was singing us something from Carmen. About this time a European blackbird resented the intrusion. From his perch atop the ruin he channeled this resentment into his loudest performance. That 10 inch bird was able to sing louder than that poor girl. This being England of course no one had so much as a sling shot to send the bird on his way. But you want to hear about maslin. I saw a youtube video "What was maslin?" 18:33. In 1994 a researcher looked at some thatch from the bottom layer of an English house. This thatch was from the year 1400. He noticed that the straw came from about 20 different varieties of wheat & rye. Further research showed that the farmers of the day planted wheat & rye together and called it maslin. Harvested it together, threshed it together, milled it together. The resulting bread composed of the two grains fed all classes of society. Why? They had famines about every 20 years. The wheat crop failed every 12 years, other grains failed every 8. If both grains failed in a given year God was unhappy with you. Wheat favored dryer weather & richer soils. The rye could tolerate lesser soils and being waterlogged by heavy rains. Some years the wheat prospered and your bread would have a bigger proportion of wheat. Other years you'd have more rye. This survival strategy kept our ancestors alive up until the mechanization of agriculture favored single-cereal crops. And that's how we do it today. Now you know more than you did. You're welcome. Barber's Bookstore 901 Throckmorton, Fort Worth, mon-fri 11-3, sat 11-4, sun 1-5

04/12/2026

Tales from the book trade #86: Our ghost. I guess the time has come for me to set the record straight on our ghost. He's not very interesting but he's real. I've heard him twice. First time when I was fifteen I was in the west hall on our third floor which used to be a seedy hotel. I heard five heavy footsteps in our 8th street stairwell. Sounded like a big man in heavy boots running up the stairs from about the halfway point to the top. It was loud. It was 3 pm on a Saturday afternoon. My hair stood up because I realized I was the only person on our third floor. I gritted my little teeth and proceeded east to the stairwell. Sure enough no one up there but me. I left quickly. Second time I heard it I was minding my own business tending shop on a Sunday afternoon about 2 years ago. I was the only one in the building. Again five heavy footsteps. It was loud. Again sounded like a big man running north to south on the ceiling above me from the third floor. He ran from one junction box on our ceiling to another above my head. The path he chose goes through a wall so I guess he doesn't have to worry about architecture. Brother Clay was up on the third floor some years back doing some work. 2 am. A tall bearded white man in blue jeans walked past the doorway of the room he was in. He left quickly. One night about 50 years ago Dad was doing another 60-hour week. He was wrapping mail in the area under the Throckmorton stairwell where we now have our Christianity section. At that time it was our mail room. About 3 am he heard bumping over his head on the third floor. All of a sudden the lights on the third floor were on. He looked up through a small gap and saw shadows passing back & forth over the beam of light shining down from the third floor. He left quickly. Came in next morning and ventured up to the third floor. Books had been thrown around. When I'm up there these days I often hear very quiet footsteps. I say "Go easy on me, Mr Ghost. I've gotta work up here." Whatever it is I don't think it bears us any ill will. So far I haven't seen anything supernatural, thank God. We've told these stories several times to various journalists but they always get parts wrong. So there you have it from the original source. And then there's the indirect evidence: Over the years people have claimed to feel a presence in the building. Bout 40 years back dad hired a well-spoken young black man named Norris to handle the evening shift. Which was 6pm to 8pm at that time. Norris definitely felt a presence. He lasted one night. And then there was Pinky. Dad adopted an alley cat. He'd started out as a white cat but he had patches of tabby on him and a tail skewed to one side. Looked like he'd lost a few fights. Wouldn't win any beauty prizes but dad liked him. He named this pitiful creature Pinky for some reason. Then one day we decided we needed a corporate cat. We may have been having rodent issues. We brought down Pinky's litter box and we brought down Pinky. Something in that building terrified that cat. Left him there that night. When we opened the door next morning PInky was a white streak zipping past us. Never to be seen again. Barber's Bookstore, 901 Throckmorton, Fort Worth mon-fri 11-3, sat 11-4, sun 1-5 barbersbookstore dot com

Tales from the book trade  #85: On Saturday a nice young man came in and made a video about us on Instagram where he is ...
04/06/2026

Tales from the book trade #85: On Saturday a nice young man came in and made a video about us on Instagram where he is CalebComplains Thank you Caleb. Here you have it:

https://www.instagram.com/reel/DWwX-d9joPh/?igsh=Z3RvdzR3cDYyb2I3

Barber's Bookstore, 901 Throckmorton, Fort Worth, mon-fri 11-3, sat 11-4, sun 1-5 barbersbookstore dot com

Tales from the book trade  #84: F18 Super Hornets. So I was out haunting the estate sales yesterday. Spotted a four foot...
03/14/2026

Tales from the book trade #84: F18 Super Hornets. So I was out haunting the estate sales yesterday. Spotted a four foot ladder. Handy when retrieving books on high shelves. Asked how much. $28 sez he. Bout half what I'd pay. Had to tell him that I lack his discerning eye. On to the next sale. Picked out a few books. Couple of nice kids in matching covid masks. Him big & beefy, she petite. I asked em if that wasn't them I saw yesterday on the 6 o'clock news running out of a convenience store. They said it wasn't them. So the five dollar reading glasses sideline isn't really bringing in the revenue these days. So I remembered the stack of promotional flyers for the F18 Super Hornet I ended up with from a book buy. I contacted Northrop Grumman and they very graciously agreed to allow me a commission on each unit sold. One sale would keep us in nachos for a year. Normally an F18 runs 52.6 million dollars, but this e/f version is a discontinued model so we could let it go for $45 million. Inquire at the counter. Barber's Bookstore, 901 Throckmorton, Fort Worth 76102, mon-fri 11-3, sat 11-4, sun 1-5. barbersboostore dot com

Tales not from Texas  #34: Lyndon Johnson was competitive if nothing else. As leader of the senate he got a phone for hi...
02/19/2026

Tales not from Texas #34: Lyndon Johnson was competitive if nothing else. As leader of the senate he got a phone for his limousine. Quite the technical accomplishment for the 60s. A political rival managed to secure his own phone for his own limo and called to mention it to Johnson. "Excuse me", said LBJ, hanging up, "I've got a call on my other phone." But that's not what I wanted to talk about today. The Allen County Library of Fort Wayne Indiana, Genealogical Acquisitions Department, managed to impress me today. Any county library worth its salt is going to have a genealogy department but their interest in the subject typically ends at the county line. What did Allen County LIbrary buy from me? Colleyville Then and Now. A history of Colleyville, Texas. I eventually called them and pointed out to them that Colleyville is in Texas, not in Indiana. We know, sez they. We keep genealogy materials from all 50 states. I'm impressed. It took me back 35 years: I was programming computers in northern Virginia and took my day off to do some genealogy research at the local Mormon Research Center. After a while a stunning Mormonette who worked there sat down to tell me about her religion. I was so dazzled I didn't hear a word she was saying. When she eventually paused to inhale I did my best to get her to permit me to buy her an ice cream cone. Swing and a miss. If she'd agreed I'd probably have a beard halfway to my navel and six kids. As Dilbert famously said; "I'd change my religion to get a date". Barber's Bookstore, 901 Throckmorton, Fort Worth, mon-fri 11-3, sat 11-4, sun 1-5 barbersbookstore dot com

Tales from the book trade  #83. Heard at the sales counter: Every couple of months a soft-spoken person asks if we have ...
02/13/2026

Tales from the book trade #83. Heard at the sales counter: Every couple of months a soft-spoken person asks if we have any sheet music. Usually the answer’s no. Anytime you pick out something to sell you're gambling. Will the public want it? Last week a lady sold me some of her mother's books. Mom's consolidating from a house to an apartment and is in relatively good health. I ended up with about a hundred pieces of sheet music for piano. So I looked up every piece, as I must. Something I was trying to figure out: If I threw out this music would it be lost to mankind? We are the happy recipients of all art and scientific achievements of those who went before. I guess this sheet music is copyrighted material. Should be a database of it somewhere. I saw kindle editions of some of the older stuff. Some of the books in our poetry section by contrast are one-offs. They were printed maybe 60 years ago, often by the poet himself. Not even copyrighted sometimes. There might be 3 for sale on the Internet. Or zero. You hate to be the one responsible for separating the human race from a work of art. A gentleman who came into the store last week had a happy solution: He publishes local newspapers. He cheerfully bought five copies of Frontier Times Magazine from the 1920s. Five dollars each. My brother under-priced them again. Frontier Times is an interesting magazine. Ran from 1923 to 1954. They interviewed people who'd seen it all happen. Men who fought the Comanche. The Comanche themselves. Indians who fought Custer. People who knew Billy the Kid, etc, etc. The gentleman pointed out to me that these Frontier Times articles were all out of copyright. He could pay a writer $50 to $100 to write him an article, or he could print the approximately 25 articles contained in these five copies of the magazine. And we Texans find our history interesting. And that’s understandable because our history’s more interesting. So what did the market have to tell me about the sheet music? Five dollars each. Aggressively priced on top of the music section. If you want to know what white people were listening to inside the city limits sign before Elvis showed up, here you have it. So: If someone offers you a hot opportunity selling used sheet music door-to-door, you probably want to pass. Barber's Bookstore, 901 Throckmorton, Fort Worth, mon-fri 11-3, sat 11-4, sun 1-5. barbersbookstore dot com

Tales from inventory  #115: The story of Kate Shelley. From: A Treasury of Railroad Folklore by B A Botkin et al, Bonanz...
02/08/2026

Tales from inventory #115: The story of Kate Shelley. From: A Treasury of Railroad Folklore by B A Botkin et al, Bonanza Books 1953. Not selling you my copy. I had a great-grandfather in charge of bridges for Rock Island Railroad in Illinois early 20th century. When a bridge was out they'd send him. He'd put the bridge back together or build a new one. He was self-taught. He'd be gone days or weeks. But more of him another day: On the night of July 6th 1881 there was an electrical storm raging in Boone County Iowa. The Chicago & Northwestern Railroad was afraid the wooden trestle bridges might be getting shaky so they sent an auxiliary locomotive east at low speed. Bridge over the Des Moines River: Fine. Four men going as slow as they possibly can to check the bridges. Not slow enough. They get to the bridge over Honey Creek... gone. The locomotive and four men tumbled into the raging flash flood. Kate Shelley age 15, lived downstream on the west bank of Honey Creek. She heard the crash and knew what it meant. Her late father had been section foreman for that portion of track. She knew the express train would be coming east at high speed around midnight. She was oldest child. She put on a coat and improvised a lantern from her father's helmet light. She ran out into the storm. Following the dirt road west & north she got to the tracks. She ran east along the tracks to the Honey Creek bridge. Two crewmen hanging onto tree limbs. Nothing she could do for them. She ran west on the tracks at a dead run. Toward the train station a mile away. But first... The Des Moines River Bridge. The railroads did not want pedestrians on their bridges so this one had no floor boards. Her lantern blew out. She started crawling west. 700 foot bridge. No illumination but lightning strikes. Crawling on rails & cross ties. The cross ties are three foot apart. If the express train comes now she'll have to leap into the torrent beneath. She got to the train station and delivered her warning. They hung out the red lantern and called back to dispatch. (Telegraphed?) Saving the lives of 200 passengers. The station master dispatched a rescue crew east to Honey Creek and they saved the two surviving crewmen. Kate's story made the newspapers nationwide. The Chicago Tribune raised money to pay off her family's mortgage. The Iowa state legislature awarded her $200 to send her to college. The railroad gave her a lifetime pass. And for the rest of her life the Chicago Northwestern crews would visit her and bring gifts. Barber's Bookstore, 901 Throckmorton, Fort Worth, mon-fri 11-3, sat 11-4, sun 1-5. barbersbookstore dot com.

01/31/2026

Tales from the book trade #82: Great moments in customer service: Hi Mr Bright: I don’t usually guarantee our books to be first editions but when they’re stated firsts, as many of these are, the odds are about 99.9% in your favor. What I can do is give you my opinion & send you photos so you can see the condition & do your own research. There is no centralized database for what constitutes first editions. Typically authors turn out to do organized book signings for the first edition of their book. Sometimes they are contractually bound to do so. Typically if you have a signed copy that’s NOT a first edition it means you accosted the author trying to enjoy his cup of coffee at a sidewalk cafe. You pulled out your beat up paperback printing of his work, he signed, and may or may not like you. Thanks, Brian Perkins Jr, Barber’s Bookstore, 901 Throckmorton, Fort Worth, Texas 76102, mon-fri 11-3, set 11-4, sun 1-5 barbersbookstore dot com

Tales not from Texas  #33: Return of the American Chestnut? You might need some good news today. As a kid I read with so...
12/22/2025

Tales not from Texas #33: Return of the American Chestnut? You might need some good news today. As a kid I read with sorrow about the death of the American chestnut tree. They ranged from New England to Alabama. They were 30% of our forest canopy east of the Mississippi. They could be magnificent giants with trunks twenty foot thick. (image) The wood was straight-grained, softer than pine, and resistant to rot. In 1906 the Brooklyn Botanical Garden brought over some sample Chinese chestnut trees. The Chinese variety has a bigger nut but it's a multi-trunked runt barely 40 foot high. Well the soil they brought the specimens in loosed the Chinese chestnut blight on our natives. Roughly 1 tree per million survived. Institutions like the the American Chestnut Foundation have been cross-breeding the two species to produce a blight-resistant American chestnut these last 40 years. (tacf.org) And then a biologist named Bernd Heinrich casually bought 4 American chestnuts out of a mail-order nursery catalog for $10 each in 1980. He put them out on his place in the country in Maine. Porcupines took out two. And the survivors took off. They have hundreds of children & grandchildren spreading in all directions. Not a trace of blight. I draw your attention to a youtube video that dropped on December 4th: The Wild American Chestnut: A Giant Returns 21 minutes 50 seconds. Barber's Bookstore, 901 Throckmorton, mon-fri 11-3, sat 11-4, sun 1-5 And online barbersbookstore.com

Tales from the book trade  #81: So I was listening to a country station out of one ear and a song came on called “Pain P...
11/23/2025

Tales from the book trade #81: So I was listening to a country station out of one ear and a song came on called “Pain Pills Don't Expire”. It had a great line: “My friends are all dead and my trailer’s on fire”. That line deserves it’s own display case in the Country Music Hall of Fame. But that’s not what I wanted to talk about today: So I was minding my own business in June 2020 and two of Casper the Friendly Ghost's older brothers came into the shop. These guys were practically translucent. We get two tones darker here in sunny Texas just walking to our cars twice a day. No regional accent. Never looked me in the eye. Had on matching black Viet Cong pajamas and black face masks hiding all except for their eyes. Them boys ain't from here. A famous mostly peaceful activist group was in town at the time to organize events downtown. An unknown benefactor had thoughtfully left them a pallet of bricks in the dead of night in case they wanted to emphasize their feelings. But we don't have a George Soros district attorney here in Tarrant County. Fortunately for our windows our cops came out in force. And here were these two young men. About 20 years old, slender, 150 pounds. Same size as me back in the day. They weren't bad-looking. They were very polite; I could see they came from good families. One bought a work on Marxism. Paid cash. The other, less committed to the revolution, bought a slim volume of poetry, and something by Nietzsche. Paid with his own debit card. Yep. Vanguard of the Proletariat. I'd recognize em anywhere. I guess even revolutionaries like used books. Then the protests got rolling for a week on the south steps of the court house. They did their chants, they showed their signs, but our cops wouldn't let em put one toe onto Weatherford Street. The evening commuters were able to drive home unimpeded and acknowledge the young idealists with encouraging hand gestures of support. So how do you get to be the same color as a bed sheet? I suppose you have to choose your parents carefully. From there you have to 1) do a year in jail, or 2) be from Portland, Oregon. Six days of sunshine per year. Barber's Bookstore, 901 Throckmorton, mon-fri 11-3, sat 11-4, sun 1-5. www.barbersbookstore.com

11/20/2025

Her father forbade any of his 12 children to marry. She married in secret, went home, ate dinner like nothing happened—then disappeared forever.
London, 1840s.
Elizabeth Barrett was 39 years old and dying—or so everyone believed.
For years, she'd been trapped in her room at 50 Wimpole Street, an invalid confined to a sofa, surviving on morphine and laudanum.
Her spine had been damaged in a horse accident at 15. Or maybe it was her lungs. Or her nerves. The doctors couldn't agree.
But they all agreed she wouldn't last much longer.
The Tyrant
Her father, Edward Barrett Moulton-Barrett, controlled everything.
A tyrant whose wealth came from Jamaican sugar plantations built on slavery, he ruled his twelve children with absolute authority.
His most rigid rule: None of them were permitted to marry. Ever.
He never explained why. He simply declared it, and that was enough.
The Poet
So Elizabeth wrote poetry instead.
Extraordinary poetry that made her one of the most celebrated poets in England—more famous, at the time, than Tennyson.
But she wrote it from a prison of silk and morphine, watched over by a father who loved her brilliance but refused to let her live.
Then a letter arrived.
The Correspondence
"I love your verses with all my heart, dear Miss Barrett," wrote Robert Browning, a younger poet whose work she admired.
She wrote back.
That single exchange became 574 letters over 20 months.
Robert wrote to her constantly—passionate, philosophical, playful letters that treated her not as an invalid but as an equal. As a woman whose mind was as alive as her body was supposedly dying.
He asked to visit. She refused. She was too ill, too reclusive, too ashamed of her weakness.
He persisted.
The Meeting
When they finally met in May 1845, something shifted.
Robert didn't see a dying woman in a darkened room.
He saw Elizabeth—brilliant, fierce, trapped.
He saw someone who needed to be freed.
He proposed. She said it was impossible.
Her father would never allow it. And even if they could escape his control, she was too sick to be anyone's wife. She'd be a burden. A responsibility. A tragedy waiting to happen.
Robert's response: "You're the strongest person I know."
The Secret
They began planning in secret.
On September 12, 1846, Elizabeth Barrett walked to St. Marylebone Parish Church with her maid.
Robert Browning met her there.
They married in an empty church with only two witnesses.
Then Elizabeth went home.
She walked back into 50 Wimpole Street, ate dinner with her family, went to her room, and acted like nothing had happened.
For a week, she maintained the fiction. The dutiful invalid daughter, too weak to leave her sofa.
Then, one night, she simply left.
The Escape
She took her loyal spaniel Flush, a few belongings, and Robert Browning's hand.
They crossed the English Channel and disappeared into Europe.
Her father disowned her instantly. He returned all her letters unopened. He never spoke her name again.
When she tried to reconcile years later, he refused.
But Elizabeth? She discovered she wasn't dying after all.
The Transformation
In Florence, something miraculous happened.
The sun. The warmth. The freedom from her father's house. And Robert—who treated her not as fragile porcelain but as the warrior she'd always been.
Her health improved. Dramatically.
The woman who'd been bedridden for years began walking. Traveling. Living.
In 1849, at age 43—an age when doctors had long since written her off—she gave birth to their son, Robert Wiedeman Barrett Browning, called Pen.
And she wrote. God, did she write.
The Poetry
"Sonnets from the Portuguese" became some of the most famous love poems in the English language.
Not because they were sweet—but because they were true.
"How do I love thee? Let me count the ways.
I love thee to the depth and breadth and height
My soul can reach..."
These weren't poems about being rescued.
They were poems about discovering she'd never needed rescuing—just freedom.
The Revolutionary
Elizabeth didn't just write love poetry.
In Italy, she became politically active, passionately supporting Italian unification.
She wrote "Casa Guidi Windows" about Italian revolution.
She wrote "The Runaway Slave at Pilgrim's Point"—a searing anti-slavery poem, despite her family's wealth coming from plantations.
She was considered for Poet Laureate—nearly unheard of for a woman.
Robert never overshadowed her. He celebrated her work, championed her voice, stood beside her as an equal partner in art and life.
Fifteen Years
They had 15 years together.
Fifteen years she was never supposed to have.
On June 29, 1861, Elizabeth Barrett Browning died in Robert's arms in Florence.
She was 55. She'd outlived every doctor's prediction by decades.
Her father had died three years earlier, still refusing to forgive her.
But Elizabeth had stopped waiting for his forgiveness long before that.
What She Proved
Elizabeth Barrett Browning proved:
That sometimes the illness isn't in your body—it's in the cage you're kept in.
That the most radical act can be simply choosing to leave.
That love isn't about being saved—it's about being seen as you actually are, and choosing to live accordingly.
The Truth
She walked out of her father's house at 40 years old, supposedly too sick to survive without his protection.
She lived another 15 years—traveling, writing, raising a child, changing literature, supporting revolutions.
The most dangerous thing her father ever told her was that she was too weak to survive without him.
The bravest thing she ever did was prove him wrong.
________________________________________
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
March 6, 1806 – June 29, 1861
Poet. Revolutionary. Survivor.
She didn't need to be saved. She just needed to be free.


~Old Photo Club

Address

901 S Throckmorton
Fort Worth, TX
76102

Opening Hours

Monday 11am - 3pm
Tuesday 11am - 3pm
Wednesday 11am - 3pm
Thursday 11am - 3pm
Friday 11am - 3pm
Saturday 11am - 4pm
Sunday 1pm - 5pm

Telephone

+18173361021

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