Last verified May 2026 · Original research by Josh Eldred
Why Santa Fe Book Collections Are Special
I've been buying books across New Mexico for years now, and Santa Fe collections consistently stand apart. It's not just that they're large — it's that they're curated. The people who build libraries in Santa Fe tend to be intentional about it. They collect by subject, by artist, by era. They buy from galleries, from museum shops, from specialty dealers. The result is that a Santa Fe bookshelf often holds material you simply won't find in a typical Albuquerque or Rio Rancho household.
Start with the art books. Santa Fe has more galleries per capita than almost any city in the country, and those galleries have been producing exhibition catalogs for decades. When a Canyon Road gallery closes — and several have in recent years — that inventory has to go somewhere. I've picked up hundreds of exhibition catalogs, artist monographs, and photography books from gallery owners, gallery employees, and the collectors who bought them over the years. Many of these catalogs were produced in limited runs. Some were never distributed beyond the gallery itself. That scarcity drives real value in the secondary market.
Then there's the O'Keeffe material. Santa Fe is ground zero for Georgia O'Keeffe collecting, and I don't just mean prints and posters. I'm talking about early exhibition catalogs from An American Place, first-edition monographs from the 1940s and 1950s, catalogs from the Georgia O'Keeffe Museum's inaugural exhibitions, and scholarly works on O'Keeffe published by university presses in small runs. These items circulate in Santa Fe households more than anywhere else in the country, and many owners don't realize what they have.
The literary history runs deep here, too. Oliver La Farge won the Pulitzer Prize for Laughing Boy while living in Santa Fe. Paul Horgan won two Pulitzers — one for Great River and one for Lamy of Santa Fe. Witter Bynner held court on College Street for decades, hosting everyone from D.H. Lawrence to Robert Frost. Peggy Pond Church wrote some of the finest poetry the state has produced. Alice Corbin Henderson edited Poetry magazine and spent her later years here. Their first editions, correspondence, and limited-press publications still turn up in Santa Fe estates, and they carry genuine collector value.
Spanish colonial history adds another layer. Santa Fe was the capital of the Spanish colonial province of Nuevo Mexico, and the scholarly literature around that history — from Fray Angelico Chavez's genealogical work to Marc Simmons's frontier histories — has a dedicated collector base. Academic texts on the Camino Real, the reconquest, the Pueblo Revolt, and colonial-era material culture often carry values that surprise their owners.
And I haven't even mentioned the science libraries. Santa Fe is home to the Santa Fe Institute, and it sits an hour from Los Alamos National Laboratory. Retired physicists, complexity scientists, and LANL researchers settle in Santa Fe with libraries that include specialized technical monographs, conference proceedings, and academic texts that have strong resale markets in the right channels. I know how to evaluate these collections and price them accurately.
That's why I make the drive from Albuquerque. Santa Fe collections are worth the trip.
What Makes Santa Fe Collections Different
I touched on this in the introduction, but it's worth expanding because it directly affects what your collection might be worth. Santa Fe collections are different from what I typically see in Albuquerque, Rio Rancho, or the East Mountains, and the differences are consistent enough that I can name the patterns.
Gallery Closures Releasing Inventory
Santa Fe's gallery scene has contracted in recent years. Several long-running Canyon Road galleries have closed, and others have downsized. When that happens, the exhibition catalogs, artist files, reference books, and gallery archives need a home. I've handled multiple gallery closeouts and know how to evaluate the material quickly. Catalogs from galleries that represented nationally recognized artists carry the highest value, but even smaller gallery inventories have resale potential when sold as curated lots.
Estate Sales from Art Collectors
Santa Fe attracts serious art collectors, and serious collectors build serious reference libraries. I've picked up collections from homes where the book library was assembled alongside a significant art collection — and the books reflected the same level of knowledge and taste. These libraries often include auction house catalogs from Christie's and Sotheby's, museum exhibition catalogs from major institutions, and scholarly monographs that are actively sought by dealers, curators, and other collectors.
Second Homes with Curated Libraries
Santa Fe has a significant population of part-time residents — people who maintain homes here alongside primary residences in New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Denver, or Dallas. When these second homes close (whether due to a life change, a death in the family, or simply a decision to simplify), the libraries left behind are often highly focused. I see a lot of art books, design books, and Southwest-specific titles in these homes. The owners curated their Santa Fe bookshelves to match their Santa Fe interests, and that intentionality shows in the quality of the material.
Retirees from Major Cities Who Brought Serious Collections
Santa Fe is one of the top retirement destinations for professionals from the coasts. Academics, physicians, lawyers, executives, and artists relocate here and bring their libraries with them. These aren't casual book collections — they're the accumulated libraries of people who read seriously for 40 or 50 years. I've picked up collections in Santa Fe that included first-edition literary fiction from the 1960s, academic philosophy texts, medical libraries, and law collections, all shelved alongside the Southwest titles they acquired after the move. The full range is often more valuable than any single category would suggest.
Museum Deaccessions and Staff Libraries
Santa Fe has an extraordinary density of museums for a city its size — the New Mexico Museum of Art, the Georgia O'Keeffe Museum, the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture, the Museum of International Folk Art, the Wheelwright Museum, the Museum of Spanish Colonial Art, and SITE Santa Fe, to name the major ones. Museum staff build personal reference libraries over the course of their careers, and when they retire or move on, those books enter the secondary market. I buy from museum professionals regularly and understand the value of what they've accumulated.
Santa Fe Institute Science Libraries
The Santa Fe Institute is one of the world's leading centers for complexity science, and its faculty, fellows, and visiting scholars often maintain homes in Santa Fe. Their personal libraries reflect cutting-edge work in physics, mathematics, biology, economics, and interdisciplinary science. These books have strong resale markets in academic circles, and I know how to identify the titles that carry real value versus those that have been superseded by newer editions.
Santa Fe Bookstores and Where I Fit In
If you're selling books in Santa Fe, you've probably considered the local bookstores. Here's an honest comparison so you can make the best choice for your situation.
Collected Works Bookstore
Collected Works is Santa Fe's flagship independent bookstore, and they do excellent work. They primarily sell new books, though, and their used book buying is selective and limited by their shelf space. If you have a handful of high-quality titles that fit their inventory, they're worth a conversation. But if you have 200 or 500 books and need the whole collection cleared, they're not set up for that. That's where I come in. I'll take everything — the titles they'd want and everything they wouldn't.
Op Cit Books
Op Cit is a strong used bookstore with a good eye for quality. They buy used books and are more oriented toward used inventory than Collected Works. If you have a small, curated selection of literary or scholarly titles, they may offer you a fair deal. Their constraint is the same as every brick-and-mortar shop: limited space, limited budget, and an inability to take everything. I work well alongside shops like Op Cit — they might cherry-pick a dozen titles, and I'll handle the remaining 300.
Garcia Street Books (Closed)
Garcia Street Books was a beloved Santa Fe institution, but it closed its doors. If you'd been thinking of bringing books there, I'm one of the alternatives. I can't replicate the warmth of a neighborhood bookshop — that's not what I do — but I can evaluate your collection fairly and take everything in a single trip.
Nicholas Potter Bookseller (Closed)
Nicholas Potter was Santa Fe's premier antiquarian bookseller for decades. His closure left a real gap in the Santa Fe used and rare book market. For high-end antiquarian material — genuinely rare books, pre-1900 titles, important first editions — I'd recommend consulting an antiquarian specialist or auction house. For everything else in the "valuable but not museum-grade" range, I'm well-positioned to evaluate and buy. That middle ground is exactly where I operate: books worth real money but not the kind of thing that goes to Sotheby's.
Travel Bug
Travel Bug specializes in maps and travel books, and they do it well. If you have a collection heavy on travel guides, maps, and geographic material, they're worth contacting for those specific items. For the rest of the collection — the art books, the novels, the history — I'm the better fit.
Where SellBooksABQ Fills the Gap
Here's what none of the above can do: come to your house, evaluate a large collection on-site, pay cash for the valuable items, and take everything else as donation — all in one visit, with no charge for the trip. That's my niche. I'm not trying to replace your favorite bookstore. I'm solving a different problem: what do you do when you have hundreds of books and need them all gone, but you don't want to just throw them in a dumpster? You call me.