SellBooksABQ • Serving Las Cruces & Southern New Mexico

Sell Your Books in Las Cruces

Las Cruces is a university town with deep book culture — NMSU faculty libraries, border literature collections, ranching families with generations of agricultural reference, retired White Sands scientists with technical libraries that fill entire rooms. I buy all of it.

Yes, I come to Las Cruces — free pickup for collections of 50+ books.

Call or Text 702-496-4214 Text Me About Your Books

Josh Eldred, owner — New Mexico Literacy Project / SellBooksABQ

Last verified May 2026 · Original research by Josh Eldred

Why Las Cruces Book Collections Matter

Las Cruces isn't just the second-largest city in New Mexico. It's one of the most interesting book towns in the Southwest, and most people — including many Las Cruces residents — don't fully appreciate why.

Start with New Mexico State University. NMSU is a Carnegie R1 research university, which means it generates and collects academic material at an enormous scale. Faculty offices and departmental libraries accumulate decades of specialized monographs, conference proceedings, university press titles, and out-of-print scholarly works. When a professor retires after thirty years in the College of Arts and Sciences, or when an agricultural science researcher closes a lab, the resulting library isn't just a pile of old books — it's a concentrated archive of knowledge in a specific discipline, and much of it carries genuine resale value in the used academic book market.

Then there's the border. Las Cruces sits forty-five miles north of the U.S.-Mexico border, and that geography has shaped its book culture profoundly. The Chicano/a literary canon runs through this city in a way that's true of almost nowhere else in the state. Denise Chávez — one of the most important Chicano/a novelists and playwrights in American letters — literally lives in Las Cruces. She ran the Border Book Festival for years. The city's collections reflect that heritage: first editions of border fiction, bilingual poetry, small-press literary journals, academic texts in Chicano/a studies, and signed copies from decades of literary events in the Mesilla Valley.

The agricultural dimension matters too. The Mesilla Valley has been farming continuously for centuries — pecans, cotton, chile, onions, dairy. Multi-generational farming families accumulate libraries of agricultural reference, irrigation engineering, horticultural science, and regional history that span decades. When a ranch changes hands or a farming family downsizes, those libraries contain material you won't find in typical urban estate sales.

And then there's the military-scientific layer. White Sands Missile Range is one of the most significant military testing facilities in American history — the first atomic detonation happened at Trinity Site, within the range boundary. Holloman Air Force Base is nearby. For seventy-plus years, scientists, engineers, and military officers have lived in Las Cruces and accumulated technical libraries that reflect careers at the cutting edge of aerospace, rocketry, optics, and weapons systems research. When those professionals retire or pass away, their personal libraries can contain material with strong resale value in technical and military history markets.

The retiree migration adds another layer. Many retirees from the El Paso metro area have moved north to Las Cruces for the lower cost of living and quieter pace, bringing their personal libraries with them. These collections often reflect decades of reading and collecting in fields entirely unrelated to southern New Mexico — East Coast academic libraries, Midwestern collections, military families who've collected books across multiple postings.

All of this means that Las Cruces produces book collections with a depth and variety that most used-book buyers aren't equipped to handle. A general junk hauler doesn't know what a first-edition Denise Chávez is worth. A textbook buyback kiosk doesn't care about a signed Pat Mora poetry collection. The NMSU bookstore will buy back current textbooks, but they won't touch the retired professor's personal library of out-of-print anthropology monographs. That's where I come in.

What I Buy from Las Cruces Sellers

Every Las Cruces collection is different. Here are the categories I see most often from southern New Mexico — and the ones most likely to carry meaningful value.

NMSU Academic Libraries

Faculty retirements and department closures at New Mexico State produce libraries of remarkable depth. Monographs from university presses — UNM Press, University of Arizona Press, Texas A&M Press, Cambridge, Oxford — hold value for years or decades after publication. Conference proceedings, Festschriften, and out-of-print scholarly works in niche fields can carry values from the low two figures well into three figures per volume. I evaluate these individually, not by the box.

Border Literature & Chicano/a Studies

This is one of the most collectible categories coming out of Las Cruces. First editions by Tomás Rivera, Rolando Hinojosa, Pat Mora, and Denise Chávez — especially early printings from Quinto Sol, Arte Público Press, Bilingual Press, and Cinco Puntos Press. Signed copies, inscribed copies, limited editions, and chapbooks from border literary festivals carry strong collector demand. Bilingual editions and early Chicano/a literary journals round out a category that most general book buyers overlook entirely.

Ranching & Agricultural History

The Mesilla Valley's agricultural heritage generates libraries unlike anything I see in Albuquerque or Santa Fe. Historical texts on irrigation and acequia management, early USDA bulletins, pecan and chile cultivation guides, livestock breed histories, and multi-generational ranch journals. County extension service publications from Doña Ana County, early New Mexico A&M College bulletins (before NMSU was NMSU), and the kind of practical agricultural reference that farming families accumulate over fifty or seventy years of working the land.

Military & Technical Books

White Sands Missile Range and Holloman Air Force Base have employed scientists and engineers in Las Cruces for generations. Their personal libraries contain rocketry and missile systems textbooks, optics and physics monographs, early computing references, aerospace engineering titles, and government technical publications. Some of this material — particularly early rocketry texts, declassified technical reports, and Cold War-era aerospace engineering references — carries substantial value in the technical and military history book market.

Southwest Archaeology & Anthropology

Southern New Mexico is rich archaeological territory — Mogollon culture sites, Jornada branch Mimbres, the Pueblo period, Spanish colonial contact. NMSU's anthropology department and the region's proximity to major archaeological sites mean Las Cruces collections often contain specialized archaeological monographs, site reports, ceramic typology studies, and anthropological fieldwork published by university presses and institutions like the School of Advanced Research. This material has a dedicated collector base.

Art Books & Gallery Materials

Las Cruces has a growing art scene — the downtown galleries, the Mesilla shops, the NMSU art department, the Branigan Cultural Center. Collections from artists, gallery owners, and art collectors in the region include exhibition catalogs, artist monographs, oversized photography and fine art volumes, and academic texts on Southwest and Latin American art. The Mesilla galleries in particular have generated decades of catalogs and art reference material.

Spanish Colonial & Territorial History

The Mesilla Valley was the heart of the Gadsden Purchase. Las Cruces has been at the crossroads of Spanish, Mexican, and American governance since the sixteenth century. Collections from historians, teachers, and families with deep roots in the region often contain Spanish colonial histories, territorial-period texts, Camino Real scholarship, and local histories published by the Doña Ana County Historical Society and similar organizations. Early imprints from regional presses carry particular value.

Regional Press & Local Imprints

New Mexico's regional publishers have produced an outsized body of work relative to the state's population. UNM Press, NMSU's own imprint, Cinco Puntos Press (El Paso, but deeply connected to the Las Cruces literary community), Sunstone Press, and smaller operations have published thousands of titles on Southwest history, culture, ecology, and literature. Many of these are out of print and carry collector premiums that far exceed their original cover prices. I know the regional press landscape and price accordingly.

Have Books to Sell in Las Cruces?

Call or text me. Describe what you have. I'll tell you honestly whether it's worth a trip — and for most substantial collections, it is.

702-496-4214

Free pickup — Las Cruces, Mesilla, Doña Ana County

How It Works

The process is the same in the NMSU campus area, Mesilla, Picacho Hills, or anywhere in Doña Ana County. Six steps, no surprises.

1

Call or Text

Reach me at 702-496-4214. Tell me roughly what you have — how many books, what kind, any standout titles or categories you've noticed. A few photos of the shelves are even better. Text works great for this.

2

I'll Give You a Straight Assessment

Based on what you describe, I'll tell you honestly whether a Las Cruces trip makes sense. For substantial collections — faculty libraries, estate libraries, large personal collections — it almost always does. I won't waste your time if it doesn't.

3

Schedule the Free Pickup

I set a date. Las Cruces is about a 3.5-hour drive from Albuquerque, so I typically batch southern New Mexico trips. Most pickups are scheduled within one to three weeks. If you have a deadline — estate closing, move-out date, home sale — I can often expedite.

4

On-Site Evaluation

I come to your home, office, or storage unit in Las Cruces and evaluate everything on-site. I know what border literature first editions sell for. I know which NMSU press titles carry premiums. I know the technical book market. You get an honest, informed assessment of what your collection is worth.

5

Cash or Consignment for Valuables

For books with meaningful resale value, I pay cash on the spot or offer consignment for high-value items that will perform better at auction or through my online channels. You choose which option works best for your situation. No pressure, no hard sell.

6

Everything Else Taken as Donation

Books I don't buy get taken as a donation at no charge to you. Nothing goes to the landfill — readable books go to Little Free Libraries, schools, and community organizations. Damaged books get paper-recycled. You're left with empty shelves and nothing to deal with.

Las Cruces Areas I serve

I pick up books throughout the Las Cruces metro area, greater Doña Ana County, and — for larger collections — into Sierra County. If you're not sure whether you're in my service area, just call. The answer is almost certainly yes.

Downtown Las Cruces

Main Street corridor

Mesilla / Old Mesilla

Historic plaza area

University Area

Near NMSU campus

Sonoma Ranch

East side neighborhoods

Picacho Hills

West mesa community

Telshor Corridor

Northeast Las Cruces

East Mesa

East of I-25

Doña Ana

North of Las Cruces

Anthony

NM/TX border

Sunland Park

Southern Doña Ana Co.

Hatch

Chile capital of NM

Truth or Consequences

For larger collections

Not listed? Call 702-496-4214 — if you're in southern New Mexico and have a substantial collection, I'll make the trip.

Ready to Talk About Your Collection?

I've been buying books across New Mexico for years. I know what Las Cruces collections contain, what they're worth, and how to handle them properly. One call gets the process started.

702-496-4214 Send a Text

What Makes Las Cruces Collections Unique

I've been buying book collections across New Mexico for years, and Las Cruces consistently produces some of the most interesting and diverse material I handle. Here's what makes the city's collections different from what I see in Albuquerque, Santa Fe, or anywhere else in the state.

NMSU faculty retirements create concentrated academic libraries. A professor who's been teaching in the English department for thirty years might have accumulated two thousand volumes of literary criticism, comparative literature, and creative writing — much of it from university presses, much of it now out of print, and a surprising amount of it carrying real value in the academic resale market. These aren't random collections. They're curated, discipline-specific libraries built over careers, and I treat them accordingly. Faculty libraries from NMSU's College of Agriculture and the physical sciences departments are equally valuable. An agronomy professor's personal collection of soil science monographs has a very different audience than a poetry professor's library, but both have buyers in the used academic book world.

Denise Chávez's hometown creates a unique concentration of Chicano/a literary material. Las Cruces isn't just a place where people read Chicano/a literature — it's a place where Chicano/a literature has been created, performed, and celebrated for decades. Chávez ran her Border Book Festival out of Las Cruces, drawing writers from across the Americas. The result is a city where personal collections regularly contain signed first editions, event programs, chapbooks from local literary readings, and small-press publications that never had wide distribution. A collection from a longtime Las Cruces literary community member might contain material that simply doesn't exist in other parts of the state.

The border region creates genuinely bilingual collections. In Albuquerque and Santa Fe, I occasionally encounter Spanish-language books mixed into English collections. In Las Cruces, bilingualism is the norm. Collections regularly contain academic texts published in Mexico, bilingual literary editions, Spanish-language poetry and fiction from Latin American presses, and scholarly works in border studies that move fluidly between languages. I evaluate these alongside their English-language counterparts — a first-edition Mexican imprint of a significant literary work can carry as much value as its English translation, sometimes more.

Mesilla's tourist bookshops have come and gone, but the inventory lingers. Old Mesilla has been a tourist destination for decades, and various bookshops and antique stores on and around the plaza have opened, thrived, and closed over the years. When a Mesilla shop closes, the remaining inventory — often a mix of Southwest history, local interest titles, and regional Americana — gets absorbed into private collections or storage. I've bought book dealer inventory from former Mesilla shops that contained gems the original owners acquired decades ago and never properly evaluated.

White Sands history creates scientific library concentrations unlike anywhere else. The scientists and engineers who worked at White Sands Missile Range during the Cold War era didn't just bring their expertise to southern New Mexico — they brought their libraries. Personal collections from WSMR retirees can include early rocketry texts (some dating to the V-2 program), physics and optics monographs, aerospace engineering references, computing history, and government technical reports. The intersection of military history and hard science creates a collecting category that's almost unique to the Las Cruces-Alamogordo corridor.

Pecan and chile farming families with generations of agricultural reference. Doña Ana County is one of the largest pecan-producing regions in the country and a major chile-growing area. The farming families who've worked this land for generations have accumulated agricultural libraries that reflect decades of evolving practice — irrigation engineering for the Mesilla Valley acequia system, USDA extension publications, horticultural science texts, pest management guides, and county agricultural records. When the next generation inherits and they're not farming, those libraries need a home. I find buyers for the valuable material and route the rest to agricultural schools and historical societies.

The Organ Mountains-Desert Peaks National Monument has generated local history publishing. When the Organ Mountains-Desert Peaks area was designated a national monument in 2014, it sparked a wave of local history publishing about the Organ Mountains, the Año de los Muertos desert, and the broader Doña Ana County landscape. This joined an already rich tradition of local history writing about the Mesilla Valley, the Jornada del Muerto, the Butterfield Trail, and the military history of Fort Seldon and Fort Fillmore. Collections from local historians and history enthusiasts in Las Cruces often contain material published in very small runs by local historical societies, and some of it has become quite scarce.

The Las Cruces Bookstore Landscape — and Where I Fit

Let me be honest about your options in Las Cruces, because I'd rather you make an informed decision than feel like I'm the only game in town.

COAS Books is the largest used bookstore in southern New Mexico, with two locations in Las Cruces. They've been a community fixture for years, and they buy used books. If you have a modest collection — a few boxes of general fiction, popular nonfiction, recent bestsellers — COAS is a perfectly reasonable local option. They know their business, they're convenient, and they provide a valuable service to Las Cruces readers.

Where COAS and I differ is in specialization and scale. COAS is a retail bookstore. They buy books they can sell across their counter to walk-in customers. That model works well for popular titles, current fiction, and general interest nonfiction. It works less well for a retired NMSU professor's library of two thousand volumes of archaeological monographs, or a WSMR scientist's collection of Cold War-era aerospace engineering texts, or a family collection of signed Chicano/a first editions.

Those specialized collections need a buyer who knows the national and international market for academic, technical, and collectible books — someone who can identify which items in a large collection carry serious value and which are better suited for donation or general resale. That's what I do. I'm not competing with COAS for the customer who wants to sell three bags of paperbacks. I'm serving the Las Cruces seller who has a large or specialized collection that needs expert evaluation.

The NMSU Bookstore offers textbook buyback, but only for titles currently in use at the university. A current-edition organic chemistry textbook might have buyback value today and be worthless in eighteen months when the next edition comes out. The NMSU Bookstore won't touch the rest of a professor's library — the scholarly monographs, the conference proceedings, the out-of-print reference works. Those are often where the real value lives, and those are what I come to Las Cruces to buy.

The broader Mesilla tourist shops occasionally carry books as part of their antique and curio inventory, but they're not book buyers in any systematic way. If you have a large collection to sell in Las Cruces, your realistic options are COAS for general material, the NMSU Bookstore for current textbooks, and SellBooksABQ for everything else — especially large collections, specialized material, and anything that requires expert evaluation.

I'm not trying to replace the local bookstore ecosystem. I'm trying to fill the gap for Las Cruces sellers whose collections are too large, too specialized, or too valuable for the existing options. Call 702-496-4214 and describe what you have. I'll tell you honestly whether I'm the right buyer — and if I'm not, I'll tell you that too.

Las Cruces Pickup — Free for 50+ Books

The drive from Albuquerque to Las Cruces takes about three and a half hours. I make the trip regularly for substantial collections. Call or text and let's figure out whether your books are worth a visit.

702-496-4214

Frequently Asked Questions — Selling Books in Las Cruces

Do you really drive to Las Cruces from Albuquerque?

Yes. Las Cruces is roughly 225 miles from my Albuquerque warehouse, and I make the drive regularly for substantial collections. The pickup is completely free — no trip charges, no fuel surcharges, no hidden fees. I batch southern New Mexico trips to keep the logistics efficient, but for large collections I'll make a dedicated trip. Call or text 702-496-4214 and I'll give you a straight answer about timing.

What's the minimum for a Las Cruces pickup?

Fifty books for a free pickup. That said, the quality of the collection matters as much as the quantity. If you have fewer than fifty books but they include genuinely rare or high-value material — signed first editions, early Chicano/a press titles, scarce technical volumes — call me and I'll talk. For smaller general collections, you're welcome to bring books to my Albuquerque warehouse at 5445 Edith Blvd NE, Unit A, if you're making the trip north.

What about NMSU textbooks?

I'll be honest: current-edition college textbooks can carry modest resale value, but the textbook market is brutal. Editions turn over every two to three years, and prices drop steeply once a new edition hits. The NMSU Bookstore handles buyback for current adoptions. Where I add genuine value is with the material the bookstore won't touch — a professor's personal library of scholarly monographs, university press titles, conference proceedings, and out-of-print academic works. Those hold value far longer than intro-course textbooks and are what I specialize in. If you are looking to donate rather than sell, see the NMSU textbook donation guide.

I have border literature — is that valuable?

Often, yes. Border literature is one of the most collectible categories I handle from Las Cruces. First editions by Denise Chávez, early Tomás Rivera printings (especially the original Quinto Sol edition), Rolando Hinojosa titles from Arte Público Press, Pat Mora's early poetry collections — these carry real collector demand. Signed or inscribed copies multiply the value. Anything from small regional presses like Cinco Puntos, Bilingual Press/Editorial Bilingüe, or the early Chicano literary journals is worth a close look. Call me and describe what you have — border literature is a category where photographs of title pages are especially helpful.

What about Spanish-language books?

Absolutely. The Las Cruces border region produces bilingual and Spanish-language collections unlike anywhere else in the state. Academic texts published by Mexican university presses, Mexican literary imprints, bilingual editions from regional presses, and Spanish-language scholarly works all carry resale value in the right markets. I evaluate them alongside English-language titles. A first-edition Mexican imprint of a significant literary work can be more valuable than its English translation.

My parent was a White Sands scientist — what about technical libraries?

This is one of the most interesting categories unique to the Las Cruces area. WSMR scientists and engineers accumulated personal libraries of rocketry texts, missile systems engineering, optics and physics monographs, early computing references, and aerospace engineering titles that can carry strong values in the technical and military history book market. Early rocketry texts — anything related to the V-2 program, early American missile development, or the transition from military to civilian space programs — are particularly sought after. Government technical reports, if unclassified, can also carry value. I evaluate these collections individually and know the niche markets where they sell.

How do you handle large NMSU faculty libraries?

Faculty libraries are one of my core competencies. I come to the home or campus office, work through the collection shelf by shelf, and evaluate everything on-site. Valuable items — out-of-print university press titles, scarce conference proceedings, significant academic monographs — get separated and paid for individually. The rest gets taken as a donation. The family or department doesn't have to sort, box, haul, or dispose of anything. One visit, everything handled, and the valuable material gets into the hands of scholars and collectors who will actually use it rather than sitting in a dumpster.

Can I drop off in Albuquerque if I'm visiting?

Absolutely. If you're making the drive to Albuquerque for any reason, you're welcome to bring books to my warehouse at 5445 Edith Blvd NE, Unit A, in the North Valley. I have a 24/7 outdoor drop bin for general donations — drive up anytime, day or night. If you want me to evaluate your collection and pay cash for the valuable items, text me at 702-496-4214 ahead of time so I can be there when you arrive.

What about Mesilla antique shop book inventory?

I've bought book inventory from antique shops and curio stores in Old Mesilla and throughout Las Cruces. If you're closing a shop, liquidating inventory, or handling an estate that includes dealer stock, I can evaluate the entire lot. Dealer inventories are some of the most interesting collections I handle — the original owner often acquired material over decades, and items that were priced at a few dollars when they entered the shop may have appreciated significantly. I go through everything carefully and price based on current market values, not what the tag on the shelf says.

Let's Talk About Your Las Cruces Books

Whether it's a retiring professor's office, a farming family's library, a WSMR scientist's technical collection, or shelves of border literature you've been collecting for decades — I want to hear about it.

One call. Honest assessment. Free pickup for 50+ books.

Call 702-496-4214 Text Me Photos of Your Shelves

Josh Eldred — New Mexico Literacy Project / SellBooksABQ — 5445 Edith Blvd NE, Unit A, Albuquerque, NM 87107