Rare Book Monthly

Articles - October - 2025 Issue

The City of Portsmouth, an Antiquarian Bookshop Owner, and the Property Owner are in a Three-Way Tug of War. It Doesn't Look Great for the Bookshop Owner.

The Antiquarian Bookstore, “closed” sign on the door.

The Antiquarian Bookstore, “closed” sign on the door.

Every community has its local eccentric. There's nothing terribly wrong with them, and they certainly aren't dangerous, they're just a little different. That could describe Walter Wakefield, proprietor of the Antiquarian Bookstore in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Wakefield is 78-years-old and has been in business for a long time, apparently since 1973. His store is closed now, the city wants him shut down, and the owner of the property wants him out. It used to be Wakefield's property, but was foreclosed several years ago. The property is in violation of several zoning laws. It doesn't help that outside of his business he has 21 unregistered vehicles he uses for storing books. But, Wakefield is not going gently into the good night. He has a claimed 250,000 books to tend to. He just wishes the authorities would leave him alone so he can conduct his business.

 

If you read reviews of this shop going back several years, you'll find a wide difference of opinion. For some, it is a crowded, musty-smelling place with no room to move around. The owner is a crotchety old man who might not even let you in, even if you accede to his demand to pay $5 just to enter. He can be insulting, bigoted, and quite unpleasant. To others, the place is a treasure chest filled with wonders, somewhere you can get lost looking at all the books. The shop and its owner are unique and charming in their own special way. What no one says is that it is an ordinary, run-of-the-mill bookshop. It is an experience you may or may not ever want to relive.

 

According WHOM FM, Wakefield has been racking up fines of $275 a day for the 21 unregistered vehicles. However, it is not Wakefield who is in violation. It's the owner of the property that owes the hundreds of thousands of dollars. The owner is a MMCT Realty, a company that purchased it in a foreclosure sale in 2019. However, they haven't been able to get Wakefield to comply either. The city really doesn't want to collect the fines. They just want Wakefield to register the vehicles or remove them. He just ignores everyone's demands. The Portsmouth Herald quoted Wakefield as saying he is being persecuted by city officials. As to whether there is a solution to his differences with city, they quoted him as saying “the only real practical solution is by extermination, exterminating my life.”

 

MMCT Realty is now planning a third party lawsuit against Wakefield. This would bring all of the relevant parties, Wakefield, Portsmouth, and MMCT Realty, into one suit to try to straighten this mess out. MMCT needs this as they are stuck in the middle. Its hands tied, as while they own the property, they don't own the cars or the books, but they are the ones being assessed the fines. With a lawsuit, the court could then direct everyone involved as to what to do. However, it is very unlikely the outcome will be to Wakefield's liking, nor can it be assumed he will voluntarily comply with an adverse ruling. This could end up badly for him, which is a shame as he is not a bad person, it's just that his thought processes work a little differently than they do for most people.


Posted On: 2025-10-01 11:44
User Name: davereis

Entry fee is up to 10 dollars now. I guess inflation hits everywhere.


Posted On: 2025-10-01 17:29
User Name: periodyssey

I suppose you were just constructing a way to wrap up this article but: "This could end up badly for him, which is a shame as he is not a bad person" is a decidedly odd thing to say about someone you do not know and have never met. Those of us in New England have many stories to tell about Walter. None of them casts glory on the profession. It is possible he is unbalanced, and or under-medicated, but Walter, while he might be "bad" -- whatever that means -- is almost always unpleasant and sometimes scary to deal with. It's amazing the store wasn't condemned decades ago.


Posted On: 2026-02-11 22:47
User Name: stankyreads

I hate to bring bad news, but wanted to bring an update to this story. Walter gave up his battle against the City of Portsmouth and the landowners, and as of February 9, 2026, he has 60 days to remove all books and vehicles from the property.
On February 11, 2026, a man was hospitalized after a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head on the property of the condemned Antiquarian Old Books store. The man, whose identity was not immediately released, was found unresponsive in the parking lot of the building. He was transported to Portsmouth Regional Hospital, but has since been flown to a Boston-area hospital due to the extent of the injuries.


Rare Book Monthly

  • Dominic Winter Auctioneers
    Printed Books, Maps & Wisdens, English Bibles
    1500-1800
    22nd July 2026
    Dominic Winter, July 22: Lot 83 – Westall & Owen. Picturesque Tour of the River Thames, 1st edition, 1828. £2,000-3,000.
    Dominic Winter, July 22: Lot 88 – Blume. Rumphia, Botanicae de plantis Indiae Orientalis, 1835-1848. £2,000-3,000.
    Dominic Winter, July 22: Lot 101 – Michaux. Histoire des arbres forestiers de l'Amérique septentrionale, 1810-1812. £700-1,000.
    Dominic Winter Auctioneers
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    Dominic Winter, July 22: Lot 102 – Miller & Shaw. Cimelia Physica, 1796 [but c. 1816]. £3,000-5,000.
    Dominic Winter, July 22: Lot 104 – Parkinson. Theatrum Botanicum: The Theater of Plants, London: Thomas Cotes, 1640. £800-1,200.
    Dominic Winter, July 22: Lot 159 – Plancius. Orbis Terrarum..., double hemisphere map, 1594-99. £5,000-8,000.
    Dominic Winter Auctioneers
    Printed Books, Maps & Wisdens, English Bibles
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    22nd July 2026
    Dominic Winter, July 22: Lot 217 – Illuminated Medieval Manuscript. From a Breviary, 14th/15th c. £3,000-4,000.
    Dominic Winter, July 22: Lot 224 – The newe Testament … By Wylliam Tyndall…, 1549. £3,000-5,000.
    Dominic Winter, July 22: Lot 238 – Douay-Rheims Bible. 3 volumes, 1582/1609/1610. £7,000-10,000.
    Dominic Winter Auctioneers
    Printed Books, Maps & Wisdens, English Bibles
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    Dominic Winter, July 22: Lot 336 – Ashendene Press. A Treatyse of Fysshynge with an Angle, 1903. £1,000-1,500.
    Dominic Winter, July 22: Lot 393 – Sassoon. Memoirs of an Infantry Officer, signed limited edition, 1931. £800-1,200.
    Dominic Winter, July 22: Lot 402 – Dylan Thomas. Twenty-Five Poems, 1st edition in d.j., 1936. £400-600.
  • Forum Auctions
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    Forum, July 16: Inundation papyrus. P.Michael 4, the ‘Inundation papyrus’, a geographical account of the Nile near Canopus, in Greek, remains of two columns from a manuscript scroll on papyrus, Egypt, second century CE. £12,000-18,000
    Forum, July 16: Book of Hours, use of Sarum, manuscript on vellum, 6 full-page miniatures, with famous Middle English inscriptions, Southern Netherlands for the English market, [c.1430]. £30,000-50,000
    Forum, July 16: Qu'ran, Arabic manuscript on burnished, stencilled, and gold-flecked paper, 447ff., Sultanate Gujarat, Ahmadabad, [after 1411 but no later than 1442]. £15,000-20,000
    Forum Auctions
    The 10th Anniversary Sale
    Fine Books, Manuscripts and Works on Paper
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    Forum, July 16: Turner (William). A New boke of the natures and properties of all wines that are commonly vsed here in England, rare first edition of the first English book on wine, By William Seres, 1568. £20,000-£30,000
    Forum, July 16: Spenser (Edmund). The Faerie Queene. first edition, Printed [by John Wolfe] for William Ponsonbie, 1590. £30,000-40,000
    Forum, July 16: Shakespeare (William). The Comedie of Errors, extracted from the first folio, Isaac Jaggard and Edward Blount, 1623. £15,000-20,000
    Forum Auctions
    The 10th Anniversary Sale
    Fine Books, Manuscripts and Works on Paper
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    Forum, July 16: Fleming (Ian). Casino Royale, first edition, signed presentation inscription from the author, 1953. £40,000-60,000
    Forum, July 16: d'Agoty (Jacques-Fabien Gautier). Anatomie de la Tête, first edition, Paris, chez le Sieur Gautier, 1748. £10,000-15,000
    Forum, July 16: Martial Arts.- Lee (Bruce). 'Praying Mantis style' Kung Fu book, containing numerous annotations, diagrams and graphs in Bruce Lee's hand, c. 1960. £50,000-70,000
    Forum Auctions
    The 10th Anniversary Sale
    Fine Books, Manuscripts and Works on Paper
    July 16, 2026
    Forum, July 16: Warre (Capt. Henry James). Sketches in North America and the Oregon Territory, first edition, rare hand-coloured issue, 1848. £30,000-40,000
    Forum, July 16: Norie (John William). The Marine Atlas, or Seaman's Complete Pilot for all the principal places in the known world..., 1826. £30,000-50,000
    Forum, July 16: Mao Tse-tung.- Kim Il-sung.-[Note book for visitors from China to Korea], signed by Mao and Kim, [Beijing, 1954]. £10,000-15,000
  • Case Auctions
    2026 Summer Auction
    August 1st and 2nd
    Case Antiques, Aug. 1: Timberlake, Henry: A DRAUGHT OF THE CHEROKEE COUNTRY on the West Side of the Twenty Four Mountains, Commonly Called "Over the Hills". $18,000 to $22,000.
    Case Antiques, Aug. 1: Manuscript orderly book detailing day to day activities of multiple Virginia regiments in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary,1776-1777. $7,000 to $8,000.
    Case Antiques, Aug. 1: Cormac McCarthy, The Orchard Keeper, Random House, New York, 1965. Signed 1st Edition. $3,800 to $4,200.
    Case Auctions
    2026 Summer Auction
    August 1st and 2nd
    Case Antiques, Aug. 1: Battle of Kings Mountain Pamphlet by Isaac Shelby, April 1823, Signed. $1,800 to $2,200.
    Case Antiques, Aug. 1: Large Tintype CSA Lt. Col. Thomas Coke Johnson, 19th GA, w/ Southern Cross, Book. $1,400 to $1,800.
    Case Antiques, Aug. 1: Rare Civil War Ambrotype, 19th GA Infantry with Johnson Family of GA. $800 to $1,200.
    Case Auctions
    2026 Summer Auction
    August 1st and 2nd
    Case Antiques, Aug. 1: A signed note written by Thomas Alva Edison to an unknown recipient, in which he shares his thoughts on Guglielmo Marconi, regarded as the inventor of the radio. $800 to $1,200.
    Case Antiques, Aug. 1: Rare 1931 TN Grasslands Steeplechase Book, Gallatin. $800 to $1,000.
    Case Antiques, Aug. 1: War of 1812 related Broadside, Petersburg Volunteers. $700 to $800.
    Case Antiques, Aug. 1: 2 World War I Posters, “Our Colored Fighters” and “No Slacker”. $800 to $1,000.

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