A selection of new books by Latine authors is set to enrich spring 2026 reading lists, spanning genres from romance to horror and fantasy. The releases include debuts and works by established writers for adult, young adult, and middle grade audiences. Highlights feature stories set in Venezuela, Mexico, and beyond, with themes of love, vengeance, and family secrets.
Spring 2026 brings a diverse array of new books by Latine authors, as outlined in a recent Book Riot roundup. The list emphasizes a blend of genres, with romance prominent amid broader themes of identity, adventure, and supernatural elements. Publications span February and March, catering to various age groups.
In February, Maria J. Morillo's debut novel The Ex-perimento follows Maria “Marianto” Camacho, a Venezuelan lifestyle columnist who loses her job and boyfriend. She takes a temporary role assisting Simón Arreaza on a singing competition show, where he improves her list of romantic experiments to win back her ex.
V. Castro's Maria the Wanted introduces a newly turned Mexican vampire named Maria, a would-be immigrant attacked at her factory job. After losing her unborn child, she journeys across Mexico seeking her creator and vengeance against her attackers.
Angela Montoya's Carnival Fantastico is a romantic fantasy where Esmeralda poses as a fortune-teller at a magical traveling carnival to escape her former employer in the king's army. She reunites with Ignacio, a defector investigating his father's corruption, as they form a bargain amid rekindled feelings.
Lydia San Andres shifts to contemporary romance in Only Friends, where an aspiring screenwriter and a model collaborate on Regency-era thirst content for online audiences.
March offerings include Alvaro Enrigue's Now I Surrender, translated by Natasha Wimmer, a revisionist epic set in the Mexico-U.S. borderlands blending historical and fictional characters to retell the winning of the West.
Mia Sosa's The Starter Ex centers on Vanessa Cordero, whose side gig involves dating clients' crushes to sabotage them. She agrees to date Jason for her sister's sake but struggles to disengage.
René Peña-Govea's debut Estela, Undrowning, releasing March 3, depicts Estela Morales navigating her senior year at an exclusive San Francisco high school. After placing second in a poetry contest behind a non-Latine student, she faces a racist teacher, family turmoil, and a new romance, told in prose and poetry.
Also on March 3, Laura Taylor Namey's If We Never End is a young adult ghost story about Sylvie Castellanos, who finds a vintage watch that summons the spirit of a boy whose death she must unravel during her summer with Aunt Viv.
Vincent Tirado's You Should Have Been Nicer to My Mom, out March 10, involves a wealthy family stranded by a storm after patriarch Papi Ramon's will reveals a demon among them. Favorite granddaughter Xiomara works to identify and eliminate it over 12 hours.
Finally, Chantel Acevedo and Natalia Sylvester's middle grade tale No Way Never Sisters, also March 10, follows stepsisters Roxy and Meli plotting to sabotage their parents' engagement by disrupting home renovations.