(Part 2) Top products from r/FortWorth

Jump to the top 20

We found 9 product mentions on r/FortWorth. We ranked the 30 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the products ranked 21-40. You can also go back to the previous section.

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Top comments that mention products on r/FortWorth:

u/lorax_I_Speak · 5 pointsr/FortWorth

The Picture of Dorian Gray is one I've wanted to read. It is a bit short at only ~220 pages.

In Cold Blood by Capote is another one I've been meaning to read.

And last night was fun. Great to meet everyone!

u/Mkbond007 · 1 pointr/FortWorth

[read](How to Be Your Dog's Best Friend: The Classic Training Manual for Dog Owners (Revised & Updated Edition) https://www.amazon.com/dp/0316610003/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_FfLhzbGE7BR2S)

u/humansvsrobots · 8 pointsr/FortWorth

60 Hikes within 60 miles of DFW

We have done several of the walks in this book, and enjoyed them quite a bit. There are good hikes all over the metroplex.

u/robbysalz · 5 pointsr/FortWorth

Building and sustaining vibrant cities full of life and economic activity goes well beyond building traffic lanes.

Check out this guys book:

http://www.amazon.com/Walkable-City-Downtown-Save-America/dp/0374285810

u/Mesonoptic · 2 pointsr/FortWorth

TANSTAAFL, y'all. Oodles of parking costs oodles of money, and it's nothing short of absolutely fair and dandy that parking co$t$ there - either pay up directly, or visit an approved merchant (indirect payment).

u/christifor · 3 pointsr/FortWorth

Lost Fort Worth as someone mentioned is really good for a broad, general look at early Fort Worth and how it developed in its early stages through WWI and into the 50s and 60s. I believe it's available for free if you have a Kindle through the Kindle lending library.

For a more specific time and event, one of my favorites is The Shooting Salvationist, about Pastor J Frank Norris and how he bristled with Amon Carter and Mayor Meacham and ended up killing someone in in his office (which would be on the second floor above PF Chang's in downtown now).

Also, a couple that are set at least partially in or around FW but not necessarily about FW - Black Like Me, which is a classic and at least attempts to document some of the complicated racial tensions during the time it was written, and Goodbye to a River (which I suppose is really more Tarrant County than FW proper) - another classic where a guy decides to make his way down the Brazos in a canoe one last time before it gets changed by a proposed series of flood control dams.