A 2025 ALA Notable Book
Longlisted for the 2025 Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Nonfiction
A 2024 Booklist Editors' Choice
An ABA Indies Introduce Title
A June Indie Next pick
A Millions Most Anticipated Book of Spring 2024
“At once painfully intimate and staunchly unsentimental, Out of the Sierra welcomes readers into the Rarámuri world and invites us to count the human costs of climate change, capitalism, and anti-Indigenous prejudice.”
—Booklist starred review
“An important book for our times, dealing with pressing issues such as colonialism, migration, climate change, and the broken justice system.”
—The Millions
“A must-read for anyone seeking to understand the complexities of Indigenous life in the face of displacement and the enduring strength of cultural identity."
—Shelf Unbound
“Through vivid character portraits and novelistic storytelling, Blanco captures what it’s like for the Rarámuri to endure such severe cultural upheaval.”
—Publishers Weekly
“A painstakingly recorded, sensitively presented work of a unique “lived experience” in northern Mexico.”
—Kirkus Reviews
"Encapsulating a broad spectrum of beauty, joy, fury, and loss, Blanco details quotidian acts of injustice and resistance, piercing through old narratives of erasure and cultural disappearance to offer up a proud and vivid antidote."
—Francisco Cantú
“In this compassionate witnessing of the Rarámuri’s living history, Blanco has intentionally reframed a long history of colonized literary poaching from Indigenous people.”
—Diane Wilson
“In Out of the Sierra, Victoria Blanco writes with delicacy and clarity about the Rarámuri’s refusal to assimilate even as they struggle with forced relocation, extortion, and poverty. It is a story that demands recognition of the climate crisis in progress and the human rights abuses it causes and exacerbates.”
—Claire Boyles
“A powerful new voice in ecological nonfiction.”
—Kathryn Savage
"A triumph of reporting and storytelling. Its narrative of an uprooted family pushed to their limits is wrenching, enthralling, and revelatory. It reoriented me to the world."
—Megha Majumdar
“Dynamic, compassionate, and heartbreaking, Victoria Blanco has a gift for blending reportage, cultural commentary, and socioeconomic issues through an Indigenous community that demands our attention from the first page and doesn't let up.”
—Morgan Jerkins