54 New Books to Discover This Hispanic Heritage Month

To help celebrate National Hispanic Heritage Month—which runs annually in the U.S. from September 15 to October 15—we’ve collected here 54 new and upcoming books from Latino/a/x/e authors.
Each of the titles here is a 2023 publication (either on shelves now or publishing before the end of the year), and you’ll find there’s a remarkably wide array of plots to browse, investigate, and choose from.
Some spotlight items, in no particular order: YA specialist and National Book Award winner Elizabeth Acevedo is back on shelves with Family Lore, her first foray into adult fiction. The very buzzy upcoming What the River Knows, from author Isabel Ibañez, features a 19th-century fantasy adventure that starts in Buenos Aires and winds up in Cairo. If you’re in the market for magical flowers, consider J.C. Cervantes’ The Enchanted Hacienda.
Horror fans will also want to take note of the scary stories on offer this year. New books include Piñata (possessed teenagers), Silver Nitrate (cursed horror movies), The Haunting of Alejandra (ghostly apparitions), Vampires of El Norte (Old West bloodsuckers), Monstrilio (the eternal plight of adolescent monsters), and Our Share of Night (demonic families, relatable).
Hover over each cover image for the details, or click through for even more information, plus reviews from your fellow Goodreaders. Feel free to add additional suggestions in the comments section, and don’t forget your own Want to Read list.
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Law
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Sep 14, 2023 01:18AM

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Law wrote: "Are these all like romance/contemporary novels? I can't wait to read Family Lore though."
By my count there are literary/contemporary, historical, fantasy, horror, non fiction, sci fi, romance, mystery, and even poetry. What genres were you looking for?

There are six non fiction books on this list. Not a lot, but not just memoirs

Also non fiction, horror, fantasy, sci fi, mystery and historical fiction


That's cool. Other people do. If it's not for you, don't read it?

When all books are sold and published at the same rate as those by white authors, then sure.


that is subjective to each latino...

I don't read much YA, but I did read Elizabeth Acevado's other book, With the Fire on High, which is YA, and I really enjoyed it.

On this list, the YA books are:
-Ander & Santi Were Here
-Rubi Ramos' Recipe for Success
-Borderless
-Viva Lola Espinoza
-Last Sunrise in Eterna
-Into the Light
-Brighter than the Sun
-A Tall, Dark Trouble
-Pedro & Daniel

I'm sure one of the authors uses that description and they're trying to be inclusive. That's why they also included -o, -a, and -e suffixes.


that is subjective to each latino..."
Is there a like button bc you wrote exactly what I was thinking

No. For example 'Silver Nitrate' is a supernatural thriller.


That's cool. Other people do. If it's not for you, don't read it?"
That is why these lists get worse and worse. Not merit-based.


it isn't.
A male can say that he is a "Persona latinoamericana".
Persona (female noun) latinoamericana (female version of Latin American).
And this wouldn't make them less of a male person.
"Latinx" it's an unpronounceable regressive term for a made up US problem, it's not a progressive term for Latin America.

That's cool. Other people do. If it's not for you, don't..."
Exactly

I agree…

hispanic is not the same as latino or latin american.
I identify as latin american, not latinx or latina or latine. Maybe that's a thing in the US.


+1

I also loved that! Ashley I mean, my kids. :p

it isn't.
A male can say that he is a "Persona latinoamericana".
Persona (female noun) latinoamericana (female version of Latin American).
And this wouldn..."
Bravo hermano! Que bueno seria que los de US (quienes inventaron ese termino) entendieran que a nosotros no nos gusta.


Erm , an author on this list describes themselves as Latinx.
It's a gender-neutral alternative for non-binary people.

it isn't.
A male can say that he is a "Persona latinoamericana".
Persona (female noun) latinoamericana (female version of Latin American).
And this wouldn..."
Erm one of the authors on this list describes themselves as Latinx as it's a gender-neutral option for Non-Binary or gender-non-conforming people.

Erm , an author on this list describes themselves as Latinx.
It's a gender-neutral alternative for non-binary people."
English is a gender-neutral language, saying "latin" or "latin-american" is already gender neutral. And if they want to speak in spanish, well sorry but in spanish there is no sound for the word latinx, its uncomfortable and impossible to say, latinx is an english word, a gender neutral option for an already gender neutral language. It makes no sense.

added it to my Want To Read list. Thank you!


No, some are thrillers, horror and/or historical


This classic has been available for over thirty years. It is brilliant and has inspired hundreds of writers all over the world.
