Last verified May 2026 · Original research by Josh Eldred
A Free Service You Can Offer Your Clients
Books are heavy. They're awkward to move. And when someone is relocating, downsizing, or cleaning out an estate, dealing with boxes of books is the last thing they want to do.
The New Mexico Literacy Project offers free book pickup throughout the Albuquerque metro area. I come to the location, load everything up, and haul it away — at no charge. Your clients get rid of their books hassle-free, and you look like the person who solved the problem.
This is a simple partnership: you refer your clients to me (or give me a call directly), and I take care of the rest. No referral fees in either direction. No paperwork. No client cost. The trade is convenience for both of us — your client gets the books gone, you look helpful, and I get books that fund the operation and stock Little Free Libraries, hospital reading carts, and APS Title I classroom libraries.
Google rating across verified reviews
Drive time from the warehouse to most metro addresses
Standard scheduling window for partner-referred pickups
Why Partners Refer to NMLP Instead of Junk Removal
When a client has books to get rid of, the default options are a paid junk-removal service or a Goodwill drop-off. Both work. Neither is great for a referring professional.
| What the client experiences | NMLP free pickup | Paid junk removal | Goodwill / drop-off |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cost to client | Free | Several hundred per truck | Free, but client drives |
| Client has to load and box? | No | No | Yes |
| Damaged or smelly books accepted? | Any condition | Yes | Often refused |
| Where the books actually go | Resold, donated to hospitals, LFLs, APS | Landfill | Mixed; majority pulped |
| Rare/valuable titles flagged? | Yes — client keeps them | No — hauled with the rest | No — sorted by volunteers |
| E-waste / TVs included? | Free, bundled in | Extra fee | Not accepted |
| Tax-deductible donation receipt | No (for-profit) | No | Yes (501(c)(3)) |
Sourced comparison detail at the lifecycle investigation — the full investigative pillar covering every Albuquerque donation channel and where the books actually end up.
Who This Works For
Each of these partner types has a recurring book-disposal problem that costs them time, money, or goodwill. Free pickup solves it without requiring a contract or a referral fee.
Realtors & Real Estate Agents
Sellers need a clean, photogenic house before listing. Buyers inherit the previous owner's books. Estate sales leave the bookshelves the agent now has to deal with.
What I solve:
- Listing-ready timeline — coordinated to your photo or showing date
- Books, magazines, and bookshelves cleared in a single visit
- Clean handoff to the buyer's agent if the property changes hands mid-process
Moving Companies
Clients always underestimate how many books they own. A 12-foot bookshelf is roughly 800 lbs of dead weight, and that weight follows the truck across the country at pennies to a few dollars per pound on a long-haul move.
What I solve:
- Pre-move book purge — I come a few days ahead of the truck
- Less weight to load, fewer boxes to wrap, fewer overweight surprises
- A "I figured this out for you" story your client will remember
Apartment & Property Management
Tenants leave books behind. Property staff usually have 24 to 72 hours to flip a unit, and books take time and back-strain to handle.
What I solve:
- or pickups for unit turns
- Bulk pickup of books, DVDs, and electronics in one visit
- Certificate of insurance available for property files
Senior Living & Senior Move Managers
Residents downsizing from a 2,000 sq ft house to a 600 sq ft unit shed forty years of accumulated reading. Senior move managers know books are the single hardest category to triage on the timeline a community move requires.
What I solve:
- Phased pickups that respect the resident's pace
- I do the carrying — staff doesn't have to lift a box
- Standing referral relationship with La Vida Llena (CCRC, Albuquerque)
- Coordination with NASMM-credentialed senior move managers
Estate Sale Companies
After the sale, books are what's left — and they're rarely worth the labor of relisting. Most companies eat the disposal cost or stack the boxes for the family to handle.
What I solve:
- Post-sale cleanout the day after the sale ends
- I take everything that didn't sell, not just the books
- Trophy titles your sorters might have missed get flagged before disposal
Schools & University Libraries
Weeded library stock, deaccessioned reference sets, summer-purge classroom libraries, retiring faculty offices. Institutional disposal lanes are slow and expensive; the books usually end up in dumpsters.
What I solve:
- Bulk institutional pickup — any quantity, dock or interior pickup
- Children's books routed free to APS Title I and UNM Children's Hospital
- Documentation of where the volume went, if your bursar needs it
Estate Attorneys & Probate Fiduciaries
Probate timelines are unforgiving and the personal representative usually doesn't have local hands. Books are an asset class that needs to be either flagged for appraisal or disposed of cleanly with a paper trail.
What I solve:
- Written donation-acknowledgement letter for the estate file
- Trophy titles flagged before disposal so they can be appraised
- Family papers and signed Bibles held for the family without exception
Funeral Directors
Families leave the funeral home and immediately face an empty house full of someone else's life. A short list of vetted local services is the most useful thing you can hand them.
What I solve:
- One number on your aftercare list that handles books, paper, and media
- Spanish-language family papers held and routed appropriately
- Family Bibles with handwritten genealogy held for the family without exception
Hospice & Home Health
After-death cleanouts often start before probate is open and before the family is local. The case manager is sometimes the only person in a position to recommend a contractor.
What I solve:
- Compassionate-pace cleanout — household material handled carefully
- Bibles, photos, family papers held for next-of-kin review
- I work directly with adult children calling from out of state
Don't see your category? Call 702-496-4214 — most partner relationships start with a 10-minute phone call about whether the volume and timing make sense.
Proof It's Already Working
"La Vida Llena residents and family members ask me for book disposal options every week. NMLP is the one I recommend."
"The most useful thing on my aftercare list. The families I send to Josh are uniformly relieved that someone took the books off their plate at the worst possible week."
"I refer my downsizing clients regularly. He shows up when he says he will, and the resident isn't traumatized at the end of the visit. That's most of what I'm looking for."
Public review history at the Reviews estate cleanout page — five-star rating across verified Google reviews.
Partner FAQ
Is there a referral fee or kickback in either direction?
How fast can a partner-referred pickup actually get scheduled?
What does the client actually have to do?
What do you actually take besides books?
What's outside the scope?
Do you have insurance and a real business address?
Can I refer clients who have valuable or rare books?
Are donations tax-deductible if I refer my client?
How It Works
You refer your client (or call me directly)
Give your client my number (702-496-4214) or text me yourself with the pickup address and details.
I schedule and pick up
I coordinate directly with whoever is at the location. Most pickups happen within as part of the same regional run.
Books are gone, everyone's happy
I load everything and take it. No charge, no sorting needed. Your client gets their space back.
Let's Work Together
Text or call to set up a partnership, request flyers, or schedule a pickup for a client.
I'm a for-profit business that collects, resells, and keeps books in circulation. Free children's books for local families.
No referral fees in either direction. No client cost. Donations are not tax-deductible.