Don Quixote Books

Don Quixote Books Some Gently Used.

We specialize in first editions of Myster, Fantasy, Sci-Fi, Biography, Art,History, Coffee Table, Poetry, Literature, Childrens Books, Pop-Ups, Advanced Copies, Military History, Photography, Music, Signed Copies, and collectibles.

04/01/2026

I raised my brother's 3 orphaned daughters for 15 years — last week, he gave me a sealed envelope I wasn't supposed to open in front of them.

Fifteen years ago, my brother buried his wife… and then disappeared before the flowers on her grave had even wilted.

No warning. No goodbye. Just three little girls left standing in my doorway with a social worker and a single suitcase between them.

They were 3, 5, and 8 when they came to live with me.

The youngest still asked when Mommy was coming back. The oldest stopped crying after the first week — which somehow felt worse. The middle one refused to unpack her clothes for months, like she thought this was temporary.

I told myself my brother would come back. That something must have happened. That no one just walks away from their kids after losing their wife in a car accident.

Weeks turned into months. Months into years.

No calls. No letters. Nothing.

So I stopped waiting.

I became the one who packed their lunches, sat through school plays, stayed up during fevers, and signed every permission slip. I was the one they called when they got their first heartbreak, their first job, their first real taste of adulthood.

Somewhere along the way, they stopped being ""my brother's daughters.""

They became mine.

And then, last week, after fifteen years of silence…

he showed up at my door.

Older. Thinner. Like life had worn him down in ways I couldn't even guess.

The girls didn't recognize him.

But I did.

He didn't apologize. Didn't explain where he'd been.

He just looked at me, placed a sealed envelope in my hands, and said quietly, ""Not in front of them.""

I took the envelope in my hands.

For a second, I just stood there… staring at it.

Fifteen years.

And this was all he brought back.

Then I looked up at him —

and slowly opened it. ⬇️

03/13/2026

AT 86 YEARS OLD, CHARLEY PRIDE STOOD ON THE CMA STAGE ONE LAST TIME… AND SANG THE SONG THAT CHANGED COUNTRY MUSIC FOREVER. On November 11, 2020, Charley Pride walked onto the CMA Awards stage to accept a Lifetime Achievement honor.

Then he did something no one expected — he sang. "Kiss an Angel Good Mornin'," the same song that made a sharecropper's son from Mississippi the first Black superstar in country music history.

He told the crowd he was nervous. His voice wasn't as strong. But the warmth was still there — every note carrying 50 years of breaking barriers without ever raising his fist.

Thirty-one days later, he was gone. COVID took him at 86. That stage was the last place he ever sang.

And somehow, the song he chose said everything he never needed to. Did Charley know that night would be his farewell — or did country music just get one final gift it didn't deserve? - Country Music
▶️Listen this song in the 𝗳𝗶𝗿𝘀𝘁 𝗰𝗼𝗺𝗺𝗲𝗻𝘁 👇

03/10/2026
12/14/2025
11/18/2024
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