The best books for New Mexico kids include Rudolfo Anaya's picture book The Farolitos of Christmas, Jan Romero Stevens's bilingual Carlos series, Ann Nolan Clark's Pueblo classic In My Mother's House, and Joseph Krumgold's Newbery-winning middle-grade novel ...and Now Miguel. Children read more, and read more deeply, when they recognize the world on the page. For a child growing up in New Mexico, that means books with luminarias and acequias, with Pueblo grandmothers and Diné sheep camps and Hispano villages — not just the suburbs of generic American picture books.
This is an age-by-age guide to the children's books that are genuinely of New Mexico, either set here or written by New Mexico authors. I handle thousands of children's books a year through the donation work, and these are the titles worth seeking out, reading aloud, and keeping on the shelf. For the grown-up companion, see Best Books Set in New Mexico; for the collector's view of the same shelf, see collecting New Mexico children's literature.
Published June 2026 · Curated by Josh Eldred, New Mexico Literacy Project
Why "books that look like home" matter
The research is blunt about this: simply having books in the home is one of the strongest predictors of how far a child goes in school — on the order of the effect of a parent's own education. Books a child connects to are the ones that turn a reluctant reader into a lifelong one. In a state as culturally distinct as New Mexico, that argues for building a home shelf that reflects the child's own languages, landscapes, and traditions alongside the wider canon. (For the full evidence, see The Books-in-the-Home Effect.)
Picture books & read-alouds Ages 0–6
The Farolitos of Christmas — Rudolfo Anaya
When Luz's grandfather is too ill to build the traditional Christmas luminarias, she invents farolitos — paper bags weighted with sand and lit with candles — to welcome the family home. A warm, specifically New Mexican Christmas story from the author of Bless Me, Ultima. Pair it with its sequel, Farolitos for Abuelo.
Carlos and the Squash Plant / Carlos y la planta de calabaza — Jan Romero Stevens
The first of the beloved bilingual Carlos books, set in the farm country of northern New Mexico. Carlos won't wash the dirt from behind his ears — until a squash plant starts to sprout from them. Funny, gently moral, and printed in paired Spanish and English, which makes it a favorite of New Mexico's dual-language classrooms.
In My Mother's House — Ann Nolan Clark
A landmark of New Mexico children's literature. Written with the children of Tesuque Pueblo, where Clark taught for years, it lets a Pueblo child describe their own world — the fields, the adobe house, the mountains, the work and the seasons — in the child's own voice. Decades old and still unmatched as a portrait of Pueblo childhood.
Maya's Children: The Story of La Llorona — Rudolfo Anaya
Anaya's retelling of the Southwest's most famous legend — the Weeping Woman — for young readers. A gateway to the Hispano cuento (folk-tale) tradition that runs through New Mexico's oral culture. Best for the older end of this band; younger children may find La Llorona genuinely spooky.
Pueblo Storyteller — Diane Hoyt-Goldsmith
A photo-illustrated nonfiction book following a real Pueblo girl through bread-baking, drum-making, and the storyteller tradition of Cochiti. A clear, respectful introduction to living Pueblo culture for the youngest readers and their teachers.
Chapter books & middle grade Ages 8–12
...and Now Miguel — Joseph Krumgold
The classic New Mexico novel for young readers and winner of the 1954 Newbery Medal. Twelve-year-old Miguel Chávez, in a Hispano sheep-ranching family near Taos, wants more than anything to be taken with the men and the flock to the summer range in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains. A quiet, deeply felt book about wanting to grow up.
My Land Sings: Stories from the Rio Grande — Rudolfo Anaya
Ten stories — some traditional cuentos, some Anaya's own — rooted in the Rio Grande valley, from talking animals to the legend of La Llorona. A perfect read-aloud bridge between picture books and full novels, and a direct line into New Mexico's Hispano storytelling tradition.
Navajo history for young readers
For middle-grade readers ready for harder history, age-appropriate accounts of the Navajo Long Walk and the Bosque Redondo internment give New Mexico children the other half of the state's story. Read alongside the background guide to the Native American literature of New Mexico.
Young adult Ages 12+
Code Talker — Joseph Bruchac
A novel of the Navajo Code Talkers told by a fictional Diné Marine who, after being punished at boarding school for speaking Navajo, uses that same language to build the unbreakable code of the Pacific war. A powerful entry point to the Code Talker story for teen readers.
Bless Me, Ultima — Rudolfo Anaya
The cornerstone of Chicano literature and a fixture of New Mexico high-school reading lists. Antonio comes of age in the llano and river country near Santa Rosa under the guidance of the curandera Ultima. Mature themes; best for older teens. It is the single most important book a New Mexican teenager can read about their own home.
Ceremony — Leslie Marmon Silko
For the most advanced teen readers, Silko's masterwork of healing after war is a demanding, rewarding bridge into adult literature, set at Laguna Pueblo. Often taught in upper-level and college classes; worth it for a ready reader.
How to build a New Mexico kid's shelf
Aim for a mix: some books in the child's heritage language, some that mirror their own community, and some windows into the other cultures that share the state. A Hispano child should meet Pueblo and Diné stories; a Pueblo child should meet the Hispano cuentos; every New Mexico child benefits from seeing all three traditions treated as normal and central rather than exotic. Quantity matters too — the evidence on home libraries says it's the presence of many books, not a curated few, that moves the needle. Yard sales, library sales, and hand-me-downs all count.
If you have children's books your family has outgrown, they can become another child's first shelf. I offer free children's-book donation pickup across Albuquerque, and gently-used kids' books go straight back into circulation through New Mexico classrooms and reading programs.
Frequently asked questions
What is a good children's book set in New Mexico?
For young children, The Farolitos of Christmas (Anaya) and the bilingual Carlos and the Squash Plant (Stevens) are excellent. For older children, Joseph Krumgold's Newbery-winning ...and Now Miguel, set near Taos, is the classic.
Are there bilingual Spanish-English children's books from New Mexico?
Yes — Jan Romero Stevens's Carlos series is printed in paired Spanish and English and set in northern New Mexico, and Anaya's folk-tale picture books draw on the Hispano cuento tradition. Both are widely used in New Mexico dual-language classrooms.
What New Mexico book won the Newbery Medal?
Joseph Krumgold's ...and Now Miguel won the 1954 Newbery Medal, following a boy in a Hispano sheep-ranching family near Taos.
Cite This Guide
Eldred, J. (June 2026). Best Books for New Mexico Kids, by Age. New Mexico Literacy Project.
https://newmexicoliteracyproject.org/best-books-for-new-mexico-kids
Original curation by Josh Eldred. Licensed under CC BY 4.0. Cite with attribution.