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8 of Our Favorite Bookstores in Texas

Independent bookstores are experiencing a renaissance. Bookworms, get your fix.

By Peter Simek

Published March 9, 2020


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There
was a time when we were told that the bookstore was an antiquated business. As
new online companies began to offer infinite stock shipped straight to your
door, people wondered why anyone would ever walk into a brick-and-mortar
bookshop again.

But
then, we started to remember how much we enjoyed going to a great bookstore.
Bookstores offer so much more than a place to buy the latest bestseller or a
gift for your favorite niece. They are community gathering spaces and sources
of inspiration. We go to bookstores not to buy what we want but to discover
something we didn’t know existed. That’s why, over the past few years, there
has been a surge of independent bookshops opening and thriving all across Texas.

Texas
has no shortage of legendary bookstores. Some, like Archer City’s Booked Up,
have been around for decades and have reputations that offer a reason to go
miles out of the way on a road trip just to browse the shelves. Others are new
additions to the Texas literary scene. What follows is a list of just eight of
our many favorite bookstores in Texas. It’s only a sampling, because a list
like this — just like a great book — can never be long enough.

Brazos Bookstore, Houston

Brazos
is a bookstore founded with a mission. In 1974, Karl Killian opened the shop in
response to an emerging Houston literary scene that needed a place to meet and
engage with one another. Over the years, it has attracted the likes of Larry
McMurtry, Edward Albee, and Donald Barthelme, who all frequented Brazos during
the times they were living in Houston. Today, the combination of a thoughtfully
curated stock and plenty of community events helps sustain that commitment to
the Gulf Coast city’s literati and enthusiastic readers alike.

BookPeople, Austin

BookPeople’s
long and storied history includes visits by Presidents Jimmy Carter and Bill
Clinton; the honor of being named Bookstore of the Year by Publishers Weekly
in 2005; and, most
importantly, a 50-year track record of satisfying the curiosity of Austin
readers. In addition to a fabulous stock, BookPeople features regular author signings
and a lively café, and it hosts more than a dozen book clubs.

Photo by Jessica Turner

Recycled Books, Records, & CDs, Denton

Recycled
Books is not your typical used bookshop. Located in the historic Wright Opera
House on Denton’s Downtown Square, it bills itself as the largest independent
used bookstore in Texas, boasting roughly half a million used volumes. As it’s
spread across three floors, you’ll have to dedicate some time to mine its
selection of classics, unheard-of gems, and rare finds.

Booked Up, Archer City

There was a time when Booked Up was Archer City, with its stock spread between multiple storefronts surrounding the old courthouse on the town square. But alas, owner and legendary Texas writer Larry McMurtry began downsizing his collections in 2013. Today, Booked Up is still a destination, even if it is only one store instead of four. With a focus on rare, fine, and scholarly books, it boasts a unique and special stock.

Photo by Jessica Turner

Interabang Books, Dallas

A newcomer to the Texas literary scene, Interabang is the latest of a slew of independent bookshops (including The Wild Detectives and Deep Vellum Books) that opened in response to Dallas’s long drought of quality bookshops. The drought is over, and Interabang’s thoughtfully selected stock has quickly established it as one of the finest in the state. Sadly, a tornado destroyed the original location in late 2019, but the beloved Interabang quickly reopened in a new spot.

Photo by Jennifer Boomer

Marfa Book Company, Marfa

Typical of a shop located in a little West Texas town whose cultural scene punches well above its weight, Marfa Book Company is not only a bookstore but a publisher and performance space as well. How does such an eclectic and sophisticated shop of this size stay afloat in a tiny town where the next town is almost a half-hour away? Come on, this is Marfa. And in true Marfa spirit, founder Tim Johnson admits that he opened his store as a kind of artistic experiment, to “flaunt or try to confuse the commercial aspect [of a bookstore].”

Burrowing Owl Books, Canyon

Todd
and Dallas Bell were inspired on a trip to Chicago by the feel and ambiance of
a used bookstore they stumbled into. When they returned to Canyon, they decided
their little town on the dust-blown Texas Panhandle needed a place that could
replicate that experience. Thus, Burrowing Owl Books was born. The Bells take a
boutique-style approach to the bookstore model, supplementing a rich selection
of new and used books with a variety of items that would appeal to any
bookworm.

The Twig Book Shop, San Antonio

Another Texas legend, the Twig Book Shop has been serving San Antonio readers since 1972. Over the years, the Twig has provided a venue for local and national authors and poets and has also focused on programs and readings for children. One of its specialties is a wide-ranging selection of Texan titles.

Find more of Texas’s revived culture at these old-fashioned movie theaters.