Great Books on Celtic Mythology: My Reviews

Ranked #1,182 in Culture & Society, #28,749 overall

Irish, Welsh, Scottish Legends

There are literally hundreds of books out there on Celtic myths, Irish and Scottish legends and lore. I don't claim this list is comprehensive, but here are reviews of the best Celtic mythology books on my shelf. Some I use for research, others more for reading pleasure, but I recommend all of them.

A note when selecting and browsing books of Celtic mythology: While some are scholarly, the vast majority are beautifully-illustrated anthologies written mostly for enjoyment and discovery, just as myths were originally intended. Yet other books on Celtic mythology are written from the perspective of the Neopagan revival, and those are subject to a certain amount of reconstruction and interpretation by their authors. Any of these books may be more or less well-researched.

Celtic Mythology

Proinisias Mac Cana (1968)

Celtic Mythology - Mac Cana

Review: Only 140 folio-sized pages, this is one of the best books on Celtic Mythology. The scholarship is good, the photographs of Celtic artifacts are plentiful, and Mac Cana manages to strike a good balance between giving us historical and cultural context, and telling the great stories.

What I particularly like about this book is its organization: there are separate chapters for Gaul (the Continental Celtic region), Britain and Ireland, and Mac Cana carefully untangles for us the overlapping pantheons and hero-traditions of different areas. There is also excellent discussion of Romanized Celts.

This book is out of print, but thanks to third party sellers on Amazon, you can often find it available. I strongly recommend it.

Celtic Gods, Celtic Goddesses

By R. J. Stewart (1990)

Celtic Gods and Goddesses by R. J. Stewart

Review: This is a good introduction to Celtic mythology. In 153 pages, R. J. Stewart delivers an abbreviated but lively account of major gods and goddesses, a few heroes, and some major sources (The Book of Invasions).

The writing is accessible to the general public, yet it includes numerous quotes from sources in translation.

Engaging illustrations include photos of ancient Celtic art supplemented with lush modern illustrations (cf the cover). A short bibliography and index assist students and researchers wishing to dig more deeply.

The one quibble you may have with this book is that it's a survey, not an encyclopedia of information on Celtic myth.

Dictionary of Celtic Myth & Legend

Miranda Green (1992)

Dictionary of Celtic Myth and Legend - Miranda Green

Review: For research, students, and enthusiasts, here is a comprehensive mini-encyclopedia of Celtic gods, goddesses, mythological figures, animals and symbols.

A twenty page introduction on Celtic history, culture, and mythology grounds the reader, but this is definitely a sourcebook rather than casual reading (it could be used as a textbook). A dense ten-page bilbiography would assist anyone doing research in Celtic studies, although of course it's not up to the minute. Individual dictionary entries include references to these sources, so you know where to go for further reading.

Entries are enhanced with hundreds of black and white photos and sketches of Celtic (and a lot of Romano-Celtic) artwork: statuettes, metalwork, grave goods and more.

The Book of Conquests

Jim Fitzpatrick (1978)

the book of Conquests by Jim Fitzpatrick

Review: If you're looking for scholarly discussion or goddess religion, this oversized, lavishly-illustrated book is not for you, although the Morrigan and the Babd both play important roles in the course of the battles. If you're looking for an epic modern retelling of the twelfth-century Leabhar Gabhala Eireann (the Book of Invasions), with incredible Celtic Revivalist artwork on every page and ferocious heroes, you have to see this book.

The book was released in 1978, when color printing like this first became feasible. The style is gripping, bardic, told in first person by the Taliesin-like bard, Tuan. Here are Nuada the Silver-handed and King Eochai of the Fir Bolg, the Morrigan (whose appearance makes the book PG-13 in one spot) and Crom-Cruach, druids and warriors and witches. Like The Iliad, it's bloodthirsty in parts, but it brings to life mythology without cheapening or distorting it.

Irish Fairy & Folk Tales

W.B. Yeats (1892)

Irish Fairy & Folk Tales - W.B. Yeats

Review: This book must be taken with a grain of salt, as it is part of the Victorian Irish Literary revival, when antiquarians and armchair enthusiasts were resurrecting Irish pride and romanticizing old myths and legends.

Nevertheless, Yeats did for Irish myths and legends what the Brothers Grimm did for European folklore: he researched and collected hundreds of Irish stories great and small which otherwise might have been lost, casting them into an epic volume. It was such a monumental and widely-acclaimed work that it won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1923.

If you can get an older edition, it includes typical "fairy tale" illustrations of good quality. I can't promise the one for sale on Amazon has them, but there is a Kindle Edition available!

Claymore and Kilt

Sorche Nic Leodhas (1968)

Claymore & Kilt - Scottish Legends by Sorche Nic Leodhas

Review: A smaller and humbler volume but with gorgeous ink illustrations, Claymore and Kilt: Tales of Scottish Kings and Castles attempted to bolster Scots pride rather in the same manner as W.B. Yeats' anthology fostered Irish pride.

A very Scottish author translates Scottish culture and spirit for the rest of us, retaining as much of the language as he thinks we can handle. 157 pages with storybook-sized type, this is definitely for reading pleasure not scholarship. It's just 11 legends, but they are beautifully retold. My favorite is the tale of the Garberlunzie Man, a no doubt apocryphal story on the classic pattern of the King/god in disguise roaming the land to see his subjects are treated fairly.

When I was about 10, this was my favorite book in the world. I had it checked out of the library continually. My mother looked high and low for years before finding me my own copy-- it's a lot easier on Amazon now.

More Books on Celtic Mythology

Suggest Your Favorites!

I don't own these books, but they have good reader reviews and/or I trust the publisher (e.g. Penguin translations).

The Mabinogi and Other Medieval Welsh Tales

The Mabinogi and Other Medieval Welsh Tales

A famous collection of medieval Welsh mythology: if you want to know Celtic mythology, read The Mabonagi.1 point

Celtic Myths and Legends by Peter Berresford Ellis

Celtic Myths and Legends by Peter Berresford Ellis

Excellent, recent book on Celtic mythology. Included are popular myths and legends from all six Celtic cultures of Western Europe-Irish, Scots, Manx, Welsh, Cornish, and Breton.1 point

Celtic Lore & Legend by Dr. Bob Curran

Celtic Lore & Legend by Dr. Bob Curran

Celtic Lore and Legend includes tales of the heroes and gods from the Great Myth Cycles and tales of witches, ghosts, and fairies, including those collected in the 19th century during the Irish Literary Revival.0 points

On the Edge of a Dream: The Women of Celtic Myth

On the Edge of a Dream: The Women of Celtic Myth

Goddesses, queens, witches and warrior women from Celtic mythology receive their due in this well-researched book.0 points

A Celtic Miscellany: Translations from the Celtic Literature (Penguin Classics)

A Celtic Miscellany: Translations from the Celtic Literature (Penguin Classics)

Including works from Welsh, Irish and Scottish Gaelic, Cornish, Breton, and Manx, this "Celtic Miscellany" offers a rich blend of poetry and prose from the eighth to the nineteenth century.0 points

The Red-Haired Girl from the Bog: The Landscape of Celtic Myth and Spirit by Patricia Monaghan

The Red-Haired Girl from the Bog: The Landscape of Celtic Myth and Spirit by Patricia Monaghan

Greekgeek's note: a friend loaned me this. It's modern, but it weaves in Irish legends and folkore still alive in the Irish countryside. A very compelling, original, well-written book.0 points

Heroes of the Dawn: Celtic Myth (Myth and Mankind)

Heroes of the Dawn: Celtic Myth (Myth and Mankind)

Time-Life's Myth and Mankind series of books on world mythology are surprisingly well-researched and accessible. Here is the Celtic volume of the larger set.0 points

Celtic Gods and Heroes by Marie-Louise Sjoestedt

Celtic Gods and Heroes by Marie-Louise Sjoestedt

Noted French scholar and linguist discusses the gods of the continental Celts, the beginnings of mythology in Ireland, heroes, and the two main categories of Irish deities: mother-goddesses-local, rural spirits of fertility or of war-and chieftain-gods: national deities who are magicians, nurturers, craftsmen, and protectors of the people.0 points

Celtic Myths and Legends by Eoin Neeson

Celtic Myths and Legends by Eoin Neeson

Irish myths were first recorded in written form in an early Christian Ireland which had not felt the direct influence of Rome. This book retells these stories and includes "The Children of Lir" and "The Wooing of Etain".0 points

10

The Sacred Isle: Pre-Christian Religions in Ireland by Dáithí O hOgain, Daithi O'Hogain, Daithi O'Hogain

The Sacred Isle: Pre-Christian Religions in Ireland by DĂĄithĂ­ O hOgain, Daithi O'Hogain, Daithi O'Hogain

The myths and legends of prehistoric Ireland have inspired writers through the ages, down to W.B. Yeats and Seamus Heaney in our own century, but what do we know of the realities of ancient Irish belief? Daithi O Hogain's book approaches the question by studying archaeological remains...0 points

11

The Tain: The Great Celtic Epic by Liam Mac Uistin

The Tain: The Great Celtic Epic by Liam Mac Uistin

The most famous Irish legend of all in an exciting and easily understood version. Tells of the great battle between the warrior CĂșchulainn and his friend, Ferdia.0 points

12

The Book of Kells: An Illustrated Introduction to the Manuscript in Trinity College, Dublin (Second Edition) by Bernard Meehan

The Book of Kells: An Illustrated Introduction to the Manuscript in Trinity College, Dublin (Second Edition) by Bernard Meehan

It's not really Celtic mythology, except that the motifs and style of the Book of Kells are pre-Christian, and are largely responsible for the artwork and decorations you'll see in any book of Celtic myths and lore.0 points

Guestbook

Drop a Note!

Twitter Share on Facebook Digg Stumbleupon Delicious Email It

Thanks for stopping by! Please drop a note and/or share this reading list with any Celtic enthusiasts you know.

  • GaelicForge Feb 16, 2012 @ 5:27 pm | delete
    Good comprehensive list of books on celtic myth... one of my favorite subjects.
  • vanessa vanzan Feb 1, 2012 @ 6:42 am | delete
    I'm really excited to learn about celtic mythology cause it's amazing one that reflects in many cultures around the world... I even don't know where start! tnks
    Unfortunatelly, I am in Brazil and people don't read this kind of books, for them only "right" is christianity.... assholes! so it must be imported =(
  • robertsugar Nov 19, 2011 @ 1:03 pm | delete
    One of the best lens so far!
  • celestialelff Sep 15, 2011 @ 12:03 pm | delete
    Great Biik List thank you :D
    I thought that you might like my
    Taliesin's Battle Of The Trees machinima film,
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t0gduIjXOU4
    Bright Blessings By Stone and Star,
    Celestial Elf ~
  • wellwritwitch Aug 22, 2011 @ 10:56 pm | delete
    Great selection of reads here. Saving this Lens so I can pull the books up for reading. That you for pointing out some new ones as well as some classic favs.
  • Load More

Other Books I've Recommended

More Treasures from My Own Bookshelves

Loading

by

Greekgeek

Storyteller, former Latin teacher, student of mythology and the ancient world: I've worn many hats, but always I've dabbled in computers and the web.

Until...
more »

Feeling creative? Create a Lens!

My Mythology Blog 

Loading

Mythology Books for Other Cultures 

My Recommendations

Loading

Celtic and Arthurian Myths on DVD 

The Celts: A Journey Back in Time (Lost Treasures of the Ancient World)

Amazon Price: $10.92 (as of 05/30/2012)Buy Now

I mostly remember this series for Enya's incredible soundtrack -- this was what catapulted her to fame -- but it's also a very good series.




Celtic Posters and Cards on Zazzle:


Visit Scenic Annwn Greeting Card card
Visit Scenic Annwn Greeting Card by Ars_Celtica
Browse Gorgeous Celtic Artwork



Blodeuwedd print
Blodeuwedd by Yurileitch
See other Goddess Posters



Etain Celtic Goddess card
Etain Celtic Goddess by MaryMcandrew
More Etain Cards