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These are the books I think of as a basic "starter kit" for Celtic Studies. Many of the "standards," those books that have been considered essential reading, are now out of print. They are still current and worth having, so I'm still going to recommend them. There are two separate lists, a list for those just starting to explore medieval Celtic literature and history, and a short list of a few more "advanced" books.

If you only want one book that offers a survey:

Cunliffe, Barry. The Celts: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford University Press: Oxford, 2003. ISBN: 0192804189. ISBN-13: 978-0192804181.
This is exactly what it says; a very short introduction, but it's a thorough survey of Celtic history and culture, from a leading archaeologist and expert on the ancient Celts. It's readable, accurate in spite of its brevity, and a good review for those looking for the current research and theories, as well as a solid introductio for those who have interest but neither time nor money for the larger tomes. I wrote a longer review here.

If I had to list the must haves, I personally find the following books essential:

Patrick K. Ford. The Mabinogi and Other Medieval Welsh Tales. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1977. ISBN 0520034147.
The Mabinogi are the four Welsh mythological tales. Ford doesn't include the romances, which aren't part of the Mabinogi proper, but he does include the four branches, the native tales, and Taliessin material that is not available elsewhere in English. I think his introduction alone is worth the price of the book, and his translation is faithful to the tone and text of the Welsh, and easier to enjoy than any other.

Gantz, Jeffrey. Early Irish Myths and Sagas. London: Penguin Books, 1981. ISBN 0140443975. Gantz offers his own abbreviated translation of the Tain, as well as most of the central Ulster tales and a few of the mythic sagas.

Thomas Kinsella. The Tain. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1970. ISBN 0192810901. Simply the most readable English translation going of the Irish national epic, and the associated main mythological tales.

Koch, John T. and John Carey eds. The Celtic Heroic Age. Malden, Massachustetts: Celtic Studies Publications, 2003. Fourth edition. ISBN 1891271091. The sub-title describes the book: "Literary sources for ancient Celtic Europe and Early Ireland and Wales." The work of two leading Celticists (though Koch is the prime mover), it discusses the Classical and Gaulish materials, as well as the literary materials of Wales and Ireland with a nod at Breton material. The text is thematically organized, and offers a good introduction to the cultural background of Irish and Welsh literature, and is particularly useful for its presentation of Classical texts.

MacKillop, James. Dictionary of Celtic Mythology. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998. ISBN 0192801201. There are a lot of "dictionaries" of Celtic myth out there; I've decided to recommend this one. No, it's not perfect, but the only real competition it has is from Miranda Green's Dictionary. Green's book, though I do like it for its lovely images, is a bit too idiosyncratic in some of Green's personal interpretations, which are not always clearly presented as personal interpretations. Ideally, one would want both books, but MacKillop, who includes a bibliography as well as citations, is more likely to be reliable and good for the long term, and it's far superior to that of Ellis, who is somewhat careless, frequently wrong, and doesn't use citations.

T. G. E. Powell. The Celts. Thames and Hudson: New York, 1980. Second ed; reprint. 1991. ISBN 0500272751. A basic overview of Celtic history, via cultural artifacts, Classical references, and medieval texts.

Sjoestedt, M. L. Gods and Heroes of the Celts. 1949; translated by Myles Dillon. repr. Dover Publications, 2000. ISBN 0486414418 . A slim paperback, still considered a standard text, with some interesting observations. In some ways, Sjoestedt is a predecessor for the work of Rees and Rees, listed below. There's much more to Sjoestedt than meets the eye; read carefully and thoughtfully.

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