What Farmington Collections Hold
I don't buy books — but I evaluate every collection individually so nothing valuable slips away unrecognized. These are the categories I see most often from Farmington and San Juan County households, and the ones that tend to carry the strongest value. If a piece is genuinely worth selling, I'll tell you what it is and where you could sell it yourself.
Navajo and Diné Studies
This is the category that makes Four Corners collections distinctive. Early ethnographic works — Washington Matthews on Navajo ceremonies and sandpainting, Gladys Reichard on weaving and the Navajo language, Clyde Kluckhohn and Dorothea Leighton on Navajo culture, Edward Spicer on Southwest cultural change — are genuinely collectible and carry values reaching into the mid three figures for first editions in good condition. Bureau of American Ethnology reports on Navajo culture, early Smithsonian publications, and School of American Research monographs are all desirable. I also take tribal histories, language texts, and cultural studies published by the Navajo Nation, Diné College, and Navajo Community College (as it was formerly known) — these circulated in small numbers and are now difficult to find.
Navajo Weaving, Jewelry, and Material Arts References
The reference literature on Navajo weaving is among the most actively collected categories in Southwest books. Nonabah Bryan and Stella Young's Navajo Native Dyes, Noël Bennett's weaving guides, Gladys Reichard's weaving studies, and the comprehensive rug identification manuals used by traders and collectors carry consistent value. Silver work references — Marc Simmons and Frank Turley's Southwestern Colonial Ironwork, early studies of Navajo silver by Arthur Woodward — and Pueblo pottery identification guides are also in demand. Trading post families and serious collectors in the Farmington area accumulate these references over decades, and when an estate disperses, I want to evaluate them before anything goes to a thrift store.
Energy Industry Technical Libraries
The San Juan Basin has been producing oil and gas since the 1920s, and the technical literature that accumulated in the homes of petroleum engineers, geologists, and industry professionals is substantial. Society of Petroleum Engineers Monograph Series volumes, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Special Publications, New Mexico Bureau of Mines and Mineral Resources bulletins and circulars, well logging manuals from Schlumberger and Halliburton, drilling engineering texts, and formation evaluation references all have active buyers. University libraries, working engineers, and technical book specialists all seek out specific titles. I've handled entire petroleum libraries from retired engineers, and the right collection can contain items that reach a mid-three-figure collector value per volume.
Four Corners and Chaco Canyon Archaeology
Chaco Culture National Historical Park and Aztec Ruins National Monument sit in San Juan County, and the scholarly literature surrounding them is extensive and deeply collected. Reports from the Hyde Exploring Expedition of the 1890s and 1900s, publications from the American Museum of Natural History's Chaco work, National Geographic Society expedition reports, and the multi-volume output of the Chaco Project from the 1970s and 1980s are all sought by archaeologists, universities, and serious collectors. Anna Sofaer's work on Chaco astronomical alignments, site-specific survey reports, and conference proceedings from the Chaco Symposia circulated in limited runs and are now difficult to source. I also take Mesa Verde and Four Corners regional archaeology broadly — the Anasazi and Ancestral Puebloan literature is a deep category with engaged collectors worldwide.
Trading Post History and Culture
The trading post era shaped the economy and culture of the Four Corners for over a century, and the history of that system has generated a body of literature that's actively collected. Works on Hubbell Trading Post and Juan Lorenzo Hubbell, the Wetherill family's trading operations at Chaco and Kayenta, the Foutz Trading Post, and the broader history of Southwest trading are sought by institutions and private collectors. Frank McNitt's The Indian Traders, Gillmor and Wetherill's Traders to the Navajos, and Price histories of specific trading families are standout titles. I also take the working reference books that traders used — rug pattern identification guides, hallmark directories for Navajo and Pueblo silver, pottery identification manuals — which have value both as reference tools and as artifacts of the trading post era itself.
BLM, Public Lands, and Natural Resource Management
The Bureau of Land Management's Farmington Field Office manages millions of acres of public land in the San Juan Basin, and the professional literature surrounding public lands management, range science, energy development on federal land, and environmental impact assessment accumulates in the libraries of the professionals who work in those fields. Range management texts, BLM and Forest Service planning documents, environmental assessment reports from the San Juan Basin coal and gas development era, and natural resource policy literature all have specialized buyers. I also take the broader outdoor recreation and natural history literature about the Colorado Plateau — a region that has generated significant nature writing and exploration literature.
San Juan River Fishing and Four Corners Outdoor Recreation
The San Juan River below Navajo Dam is one of the premier tailwater trout fisheries in the country, and it has attracted serious fly fishers and their libraries for decades. Early San Juan fishing guides, national tailwater literature, Colorado Plateau hiking and canyon guides, and natural history writing about the Four Corners region all carry collector value. The outdoor recreation libraries of longtime Farmington residents often contain out-of-print guides and natural history titles that are now actively sought by the outdoor publishing community and collectors of outdoor literature. I also take hunting and fishing literature specific to the San Juan Basin, including New Mexico Department of Game and Fish publications and regional hunting guides.
Tony Hillerman and Southwest Mystery
Tony Hillerman set many of his Jim Chee and Joe Leaphorn mysteries in the Navajo Nation and the Four Corners region, and the Farmington area appears throughout his work. First editions of Hillerman's Navajo mysteries carry consistent collector value, with early titles in fine condition reaching the mid three figures. Signed copies are actively sought, and first printings are distinguishable from later printings if you know what to look for. I also take the broader Southwest mystery and regional fiction category — authors like Anne Hillerman, who continued her father's series, and writers who've followed Hillerman's path through the Four Corners landscape. See my Tony Hillerman collecting guide for more detail on what's valuable and what's not.
Farming, Ranching, and San Juan Valley Agriculture
Before the oil boom transformed the economy, the San Juan Valley was prime agricultural land — apple orchards, alfalfa, farming families who'd been there for generations. The agricultural literature of the region includes farm management texts, irrigation engineering manuals for the San Juan project, and the practical books that farming families accumulated over the course of the twentieth century. I also take the broader Southwest ranching and agriculture literature — range management, livestock breeding, water rights law — which has an active collector base among Western history scholars and agricultural professionals.