Half Price Books – Oklahoma City, OK
This Texas chain was known to me, but I had never lived in a city to have one. I must have first visited one of these clean, bright stores with the big red signs in the Dallas-Ft. Worth area at some point when I lived in Lubbock and got to the big city for a visit. I was thrilled when HPB announced they would open their first store in Oklahoma City. I don’t think the bookshop owners felt that way, though. This first store was (and still is, I assume), at 63rd and May Ave.
Half Price Books is a very different kind of bookshop. It is mostly used books, but they also carry a sizeable percentage of remainders of otherwise new books from publishers. If you’re unfamiliar with the term, remainders are the printing over-runs, the returns, and the unsold stock publishers always have. Publishing is a highly speculative industry, and publishers often end up with too many books they need to deal with. Bibliophiles dream of having a high-quality, high-turnover shop nearby. They may not have the particular book you need, but they’ll often have something of interest at a decent price. Half Price Books is not the stop to make when looking for a missing link in your collection, though collectible books do show up there.
What else is nice is that Half Price Books staffs a buyer’s counter in their stores to look up books in their database and make an offer. Yes, it’s pennies on the dollar, and no, they don’t put an offer on everything, but they will take everything and dispose of it. Frankly, when you have more books than you know what to do with or no time to deal with, is a lifesaver.
At least, the buy counter was once my life-saver. While living in Oklahoma City (and working for the Oklahoma Historical Society), I went to an auction. It was a strange auction made up of huge lots of old clocks and watches, antique fishing gear, other antique outdoors equipment, and books. Tens of thousands of books, easily. A colleague at OHS alerted me to the sale, knowing my interest in old books. He was mostly going for the fishing and outdoors, but also out of curiosity.
One of my major finds from that auction was featured in the book Rare Books Uncovered by Rebecca Rego Barry, which tells the story of my discovery of a book that had once been part of the Vatican’s library, printed in 1536 in its contemporary binding. Good stuff. Another part of that story is what came with that one little book (seriously, it fits in a pocket) — over a thousand other books. It weighed down my SUV so badly I was worried about the brakes on the drive home. I had a difficult time getting one of the doors to stay latched so I could hit the power locks.
Sorting that load of books into things I wanted to keep, fairly valuable books that needed to be sold via ebay to get a good result, and then a couple of small piles to send to specialists and put aside for friends. After that, there were still hundreds and hundreds of other good used books. These are what I took to Half Price Books. I had no time or storage space to sell all of that myself online. It takes a lot of work to sell books online, even for a single book, to photograph it well, write up a detailed description, answer questions, etc. So, a couple of safer car loads to Half Price Books, and I had enough cash to cover rent that month from book sales, making a sizeable profit over what I had spent at the auction. And I still had special books to sell online and a few lovely things to keep.
Having a buyer at the ready, and able to buy at a scale most local shops cannot and needing enormous amounts of books in stock and keeping it constantly rotating with reasonable prices at their many stores — it seems an excellent addition to a local ecosystem of books and people who love them. I’ve always liked HPB, anyway.
About the Author: Benjamin L. Clark writes and works as a museum curator.