Editor’s Note: This is one of the stories published in the May/June 2026 issue of ETX View Magazine, a product of the Tyler Morning Telegraph and Longview News-Journal. More stories will be posted in the coming days. To read the full digital flipbook, visit etxview.com .
When people who love Longview come together, nothing but good can come for the community. That sentiment rang true when a team on a mission united with the right people to see their dream come to fruition.
Thousand Cranes Gallery and Arts!Longview partnered with a local artist and the City of Longview to bring a Free Little Library and Free Little Art Gallery to downtown. A project years in the making, the library and gallery were unveiled in February and have since been bringing joy to all in their path.
“When we get together and put our minds together and our hearts and our dreams, I think that it’s a really special thing,” Thousand Cranes Gallery owner Becca Barron said in a recent TikTok video explaining the project. “So much right now in the world is freaking horrible, but we can make our corner a little bit brighter, and we can shine our light, and love is very powerful. So let’s love one another and have fun downtown.”
The library is located at the corner of Tyler and Center streets in front of Silver Grizzly Espresso. Here, passersby can drop off or trade out used books. The art gallery can be found at the corner of Tyler and Fredonia streets, just outside of the Sculpture Garden. At this neat spot, community members are invited to make, leave and trade small artistic pieces.
From left, Becca Barron, Christina Cavazos, and Melody Calhoun (Contributed Photos)
The library and gallery are each made from retired newspaper stands, courtesy of the Longview News-Journal. Arts!Longview said Charles Arnold helped the project leaders retrofit the stands and local artist Melody Calhoun painted each one with a uniquely inspired design.
“Right before the paint job began last summer, I walked around downtown and looked at everything that was already out there and chose colors in my mind that I thought would pop,” Calhoun wrote in a post on her Facebook page after the unveiling. “I am so excited that they are finally out in the wild and that they look just as pretty as I thought they would!”
Calhoun said the project involved three years of planning.
“I can’t wait to see people put their little art projects in the gallery, and see people pull books out of the box,” she wrote. “I hope this brings people walking around downtown Longview joy!”
- Thousand Cranes Gallery and Arts!Longview partnered with a local artist and the City of Longview to bring a Free Little Library and Free Little Art Gallery to downtown. (Les Hassell/ETX View)
- The art gallery can be found at the corner of Tyler and Fredonia streets, just outside of the Sculpture Garden. At this neat spot, community members are invited to make, leave and trade small artistic pieces. (Les Hassell/ETX View)
- The library is located at the corner of Tyler and Center streets in front of Silver Grizzly Espresso. Here, passersby can drop off or trade out used books. (Les Hassell/ETX View)
- Melody Calhoun works on the little free library with Becca Barron’s vision in mind to honor Eiko Cain and Barron’s ancestors. (Contributed Photo)
Barron is especially excited about seeing this project come to life. She was inspired to start a Free Little Library downtown and possibly some sort of arts supplies exchange. So, Barron connected with the city, who pointed her to Arts!Longview Executive Director Christina Cavazos who was already working with Calhoun with the goal to put together a Free Little Art Gallery. After connecting with the right people and getting all the necessary permissions and doing a lot of work behind the scenes, the team brought the vision to life.
“The purpose of the Free Little Art Gallery is to take a little bit of art with you and leave a little bit of art,” Barron explained in a video on her gallery’s Instagram. “So say you’re drawing and sketching things in your sketchbook, and you want to just leave it for someone else. This is the perfect spot to do that.”
As artists continue to create pieces to bring and keep the art gallery stocked, other community members can be seen leaving or trading a book at the little library.
“So many books are in here right now, I love to see this,” Barron said in a video while visiting the library recently. “It’s a really beautiful legacy to my grandma as well.”
- The library is located at the corner of Tyler and Center streets in front of Silver Grizzly Espresso. Here, passersby can drop off or trade out used books. (Les Hassell/ETX View)
- Becca Barron, right, and her grandmother, Eiko Cain. (Contributed Photo)
- In this still image from a video posted on Thousand Cranes Gallery’s Instagram, gallery owner Becca Barron explains her personal connection to the project and inspiration behind it.
For Barron, the projects hold great meaning on a personal level. The library itself has special family ties.
“The Free Little Library, in particular, holds a very special place in her heart,” a post on the gallery’s Instagram reads. “It’s a piece filled with intention, woven with elements of her Japanese heritage, her ancestors, and most tenderly, a tribute to her grandmother, Eiko Cain.”
Arts!Longview said Charles Arnold helped the project leaders retrofit the stands and local artist Melody Calhoun painted each one with a uniquely inspired design. (Les Hassell/ETX View)
The gallery said each and every detail on the little library stand carries a beautiful meaning. Barron and Calhoun worked together on the vision so it would be a fitting tribute to Barron’s ancestors while aligning with Calhoun’s artistic talents.
“The Free Little Library which is dedicated to Eiko and Becca’s grandmother, Tsuru, whose name means “crane,” a symbol of hope and good luck,” the post reads. “At the top, you’ll find a yellow-patterned crane inspired by Eiko’s beloved couch. If you look to the bottom right, there’s Eiko’s challenge: find all 8 hidden cranes to receive a ‘lovely lucky day.’ And on the back, a blooming cherry blossom tree and red sun honoring Japan’s rising sun.”
“I wanted it to really pay homage to my Japanese roots and of course the cranes are special to me,” Barron said in a video on Instagram. “… This is just a little nod to my ancestors.”
Barron helped create the library and gallery “as a fun way to connect with the community and as a living tribute to her grandmother, her ancestors, and the stories that continue to shape her.”
“Our hope for when you visit the Free Little Art Library, is that you take a moment to admire the art, take or leave something, and remember the love and legacy of Eiko Cain,” the gallery said.
Barron’s beloved grandmother, Eiko, passed away in March. “She was one of a kind. My muse and friend,” Barron wrote on Instagram. It is her hope residents and visitors of downtown Longview continue to visit the Free Little Library and take the Eiko’s Challenge.
“Exchange books and share books with one another, and when you come down here, think of my grandma too,” Barron said.
So whether you just pass by and engage with the gallery and library or make a special trip to downtown Longview to do so, you won’t regret adding this activity to your summer bucket list.








