Calvin Tower was the third-great-grandson of Stefan Toren, the owner and operator of The Manhattan Restaurant of the Mind, and a founding member of the Tet Corporation along with his friend Aaron Deepneau. He sold a copy of Charlie the Choo-Choo and a riddle book to Jake Chambers, and later sold the vacant lot in Manhattan that contained the Rose to Roland Deschain. He and Tower once rescued Donald Callahan from Norton Randolph and William Garton.
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| - Calvin Tower was the third-great-grandson of Stefan Toren, the owner and operator of The Manhattan Restaurant of the Mind, and a founding member of the Tet Corporation along with his friend Aaron Deepneau. He sold a copy of Charlie the Choo-Choo and a riddle book to Jake Chambers, and later sold the vacant lot in Manhattan that contained the Rose to Roland Deschain. He and Tower once rescued Donald Callahan from Norton Randolph and William Garton.
- Calvin Tower was the owner of The Manhattan Restaurant of the Mind . He ran the place along with his friend, Aaron Deepneau. His last name was originally Toren, the Dutch word for tower, and was the third-great-grandson of Stephan Toren. He owned a ring with a book on it and the inscription Ex Libris. He died of a heart attack in 1990.
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| - Calvin Tower was the third-great-grandson of Stefan Toren, the owner and operator of The Manhattan Restaurant of the Mind, and a founding member of the Tet Corporation along with his friend Aaron Deepneau. He sold a copy of Charlie the Choo-Choo and a riddle book to Jake Chambers, and later sold the vacant lot in Manhattan that contained the Rose to Roland Deschain. He and Tower once rescued Donald Callahan from Norton Randolph and William Garton.
- Calvin Tower was the owner of The Manhattan Restaurant of the Mind . He ran the place along with his friend, Aaron Deepneau. His last name was originally Toren, the Dutch word for tower, and was the third-great-grandson of Stephan Toren. He owned a ring with a book on it and the inscription Ex Libris. Calvin was not a very successful businessman. He bought antique books and couldn't bear to part with them. He had a huge storehouse of books behind his store. He was deep in debt and used to own a great deal of property, but sold the land off in order to pay his debts. The only land he had left by the time of the events in The Dark Tower series is the vacant lot on the corner of Second Avenue and Forty-Sixth Street in New York City. He died of a heart attack in 1990.
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