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The Book of Celtic Myths: From the Mystic Might of the Celtic Warriors to the Magic of the Fey Folk, the Storied History and Folklore of Ireland, Scotland, Brittany, and Wales

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Hear the tales of Gods, monsters, magic, and more! Warriors, poets, scholars, and visionaries—from the depths of time the ancient Celts have fascinated us. Their rich heritage lives on today. But who were they? From the Druids and fairies to King Arthur and Celtic Christianity, there is much to be learned about these natives of the British and Irish islands. Their stories are fantastic and stirring, and through them, you'll gain a glimpse into what life was like during the Iron Age. These legends, first told through song as people gathered around the fire more than 2,000 years ago, are now here for you to explore. Experience the wonder and wisdom of these mysterious people with The Book of Celtic Myths.

284 pages, Kindle Edition

Published December 2, 2016

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Jennifer Emick

6 books1 follower

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5 stars
67 (22%)
4 stars
109 (37%)
3 stars
95 (32%)
2 stars
18 (6%)
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Displaying 1 - 29 of 29 reviews
Profile Image for Michael McGrath.
243 reviews4 followers
April 28, 2018
As charming as the volume appears to be in it's hand sized green binding, I'm afraid I cannot recommend this volume not even as an introduction to Celtic mythology. The reason is simple. While I am no expert on all things Celtic, I have dedicated most of my life to reading countless iterations of the Arthurian Legends from Geoffrey of Monmouth, Wace, Layamon, Chretien de Troyes, the French Vulgate in a Spanish translation, the medieval sources of Gawain stories, Malory, upward into the Victorians and even many contemporary versions. Hence, I knew the Arthurian chapter in this book would be short, given the scope of the material covered here. What I did not expect was outright lazy research that seems to owe more to Marion Zimmer Bradley's take on the legend than the actual legend from its source materials.

Once, I found glaring errors in this section, the rest of the book was ruined for me, as I don't know what to think of the rest of material. Was the research on Ulster cycles, or the gods, or the druids just as prone to such errors as well? I do not have anything against New Age or feminist takes on the material, as long as they are presented as such. The earlier parts of the book captivated me with the expected cursory overviews I would be getting in a tome this small, but I am afraid that there is a wee bit too much of conjectural musings for my tastes and am open to any suggestions of where to find a good overview of Celtic mythology, as this is not it.

This book includes overviews or summas of the Ulster and Fennian cycles, the Mabinogion, the Arthurian legends, aspects bearing on religion, the druids, gods, sacred places and beasts, and even the Christian mythology that developed with Celtic infusion. There are parts that are very entertaining, but in the end after reading the Arthurian chapter, I still wonder how much of this was truly researched.

As much as I hate to say this, because I wanted to love this book, you would be probably better off checking out wiki's on the subject than this tome.

Once again, if anyone knows of a good Celtic compendium of this nature, please recommend it to me here. I feel like a need a bit of mouthwash after finishing this. Maybe I'll read some work by Loomis on Celtic myth instead.
7,002 reviews83 followers
August 29, 2021
Interesting content, but not the best book. Clearly not intent to be read cover to cover, maybe more as a reference book. There is a lot of repetition from one part to another, like the author assume that you didn’t read what was written in the previous chapter. Still, lot of information on the Celtic myths (gods, creatures, legends, etc.). I love to read about those and compare with myth from other culture or religion and also see where some stories come from, how they evolve and how they inspire cotemporary author. Maybe not the best book of all, but very decent and as a first read about this topic for me, it did a good introduction!
Profile Image for Brena Green.
144 reviews22 followers
March 16, 2024
Here for the faeries 🧚 and mermaids 🧜🏾‍♀️
Profile Image for yasha.
148 reviews3 followers
August 29, 2023
honestly? this book feels like the author got tasked with doing a presentation on Celtic mythology, googled random things to do with Celtic mythology, ripped the first few sentences off Wikipedia, and bound them together.
Combined with the misinformation in some of the chapters, it's a no from me, dawg.
Profile Image for Ariel.
159 reviews
October 30, 2021
I thought this was a book with myths in it, or going over the evolution of different myths. It's more an encyclopedia about Celtic myths and mythic figures. It's still an interesting and informative read, but most entries are about a page each, so you don't really get alot of either myth or history for each figure.
Profile Image for Joey Mitchell.
4 reviews
November 4, 2025
It’s a lazy and reductionist take on a fabulous and extensive topic. This reads like Jennifer Emick was a middle school girl who had to binge write a history essay to pass 7th grade. It’s probably only useful for someone who wants to go around claiming they read a book on Celtic myths.

She cannot even introduce the topic without contradicting herself:
“Unfortunately, the majority of this ancient wisdom was lost forever with the coming of Christianity to the Celtic Isles. Ironically, the task of recording the remnants of Celtic Mythology fell to the Christian Monasteries, and the remnant of Celtic wisdom was preserved by those who destroyed it.”

Ok Jennifer, did the Christians destroy it, or did they preserve it? Pick one, you silly, hateful girl. Also, if much of this “wisdom” was destroyed, how does she know about it? It is erroneously foolish of Jennifer to write about the Christian monastics this way in a book claiming to cover topics that would no longer exist without the Christians.

If you want to learn “history” from someone who is so arrogant and spiteful of historical scholars that she uses “B.C.E.” Instead of B.C. Then I suppose this elementary work is what you are looking for. But I find it hilarious that she scolds the Christians in a book whose only primary sources are written by Christians. Maybe I’m confused because I did not find this book in the comedy section.
Profile Image for Frank Feldmann.
21 reviews1 follower
May 3, 2024
I read this as background for running a role playing game. At first, I was confused. This is because the books organization wasn't clear to me as I went through the chapters on the various historical sources and the gods they describe. However, that's how real-life mythologies are; they are far less defined than a game requires.
Once past that, the book does an excellent job with the traditions that were followed, including what the Celts considered sacred. There was good background on sacred trees, water, and the religious calendar. There was also a very good explanation of the role of druids and their various types. This was particularly important, since most games get the tone of druids and bards completely wrong.
Profile Image for Aisha.
15 reviews
May 25, 2024
I read this book because of the pretty cover. I do not specialize in Celtic mythology so I have no way of telling what’s accurate and what’s not. I agree with other reviewers that is nit meant to be read front to back. When she writes things like “Epona may have had early connections to the Ancient Greek goddess Demeter.”, I wish that she would expound on those comparisons instead of just stating it without evidence, and just saying that “there is evidence.” There are nice illustrations inside of the book, but only the illustrator for the cover of the book is credited, so I do not know if Jennifer Erick drew these herself or not.
14 reviews3 followers
November 30, 2019
I was persuaded by how this book, not retelling the mythology, analyzed the evolution of it to argue for the deep influence this stuff had on Christian culture, even on the Norse mythology that seems to have been better preserved. And the stuff that George R.R. Martin used for Game of Thrones (Bran the Raven, the dark god Balor, the importance of trees, the warrior who loses his hand before gaining a silver one, the holiness of trees, the symbolism of the hound) is remarkable.
Profile Image for Justin Wiggins.
Author 28 books219 followers
April 14, 2023
This book by Jennifer Emick gives a very rich historical context on the Celts, Celtic mythology, the druids, the ogham alphabet, Celtic art, and when Christianity came to the British Isles. My favorite parts of the book was reading about the ancient Irish myth of Tir Na Nog, the Celtic Goddess Brigid, and The Book of Kells. I highly recommend it.
Profile Image for Kambrie Williams.
174 reviews30 followers
July 27, 2018
A great book to introduce people into Celtic mythology. Full of information and interesting facts, this book is an interesting read to anyone interested in mythology. It has a ton of information and switches between ideas quickly without going into too much depth in anything.
Profile Image for K Ascalon.
Author 1 book5 followers
September 16, 2020
Media gives an excellent spread and explanation of celtic mythology without getting too in depth nor being too shallow. An excellent read, not only for the myths themselves but for a view of the culture they arose from.
Profile Image for Jeremy Cox.
400 reviews2 followers
August 30, 2024
I think this book had some interesting parts, but was a little difficult to follow. It sort of combined myth with history of celtic folks. I listened to it via audio, and possibly this is one that needs to be engaged in print.
512 reviews5 followers
April 30, 2025
Decent overview, very light in a lot of places. Also I added several grains of salt when the book referenced the barbarism of deaths on gladiatorial combat. Which. Is not factually accurate. So. What other facts are more 'everybody knows' mistakes?
16 reviews5 followers
August 23, 2018
Was good for cultural reference of religion. Only summarized the myths.
Profile Image for Etain Arishat.
4 reviews
January 20, 2021
It was an enjoyable read, excellent as an introduction to Celtic mythology. I was a little disappointed by the lack of sources, however.
105 reviews2 followers
January 11, 2023
Good but basic explanation of Celtic myths, especially for a beginner.
Profile Image for Lio Leeuwerink.
84 reviews
July 7, 2023
Great overview and a delight to read as an introduction to the subject. Lacks depth or sources.
Profile Image for LotusBlade.
364 reviews8 followers
August 3, 2023
A Scottish witch gave me this, and it's been the most extensive and detailed account if Celtic history, mythology, and stories I've ever read. A real treasure.
Profile Image for Nick Heim.
180 reviews1 follower
June 4, 2024
Not really meant to be read cover to cover
Profile Image for Lukas Sarnow.
73 reviews4 followers
July 9, 2025
Amazing how much our understanding of day-to-day life and Christianity are informed by the people who built Stonehenge!
Profile Image for Aparna.
30 reviews
February 11, 2017
Having no idea about Celtic Mythology except what I got from watching Secret of the Kells and Song of the Sea (both films from Cartoon Saloon), I found this book a good introduction to Celtic myths. The language and organization of contents flows nicely. However, the glaring flaw in the book, at least as far as I am concerned, is the lack of an author AND any references. Especially since the book has many lines which speculates about 'what actually would have happened', 'what it could be symbolizing', etc. If I'm reading a book with speculations, I need to know whose opinions it is (it need not be a person, at least cite some specific works of historians!). Considering the content and the nature of writing in this book, and my own ignorance on the subject, the publishers could have written utter rubbish and I wouldn't know without going to look in other sources (which I intend to do, asap).
Profile Image for DarkStar's Book Cavern.
205 reviews32 followers
November 9, 2024
I DNF'd this one. The title is incredibly misleading. This is N0T a book of Celtic Myths. This is more of an encyclopedia of celtic myths and even then its wishy washy at best. There are much, much better deep dives into celtic myths etc. my recommendation is do not even waste your time with this one. Straight to the charity shop it goes!
Profile Image for Jessica.
86 reviews
April 14, 2017
I was given this book as a gift due to my love for Celtic lore. While this book isn't an end-all, be-all resource, it is a really decent introduction to the mythology and history of the Celtic pantheon and different aspects of their culture. I really enjoyed how the author made sure to separate where the information we have has been filtered through the eyes of Christians and Romans. The quick and easy to understand breakdown of the many tales were nice and I think for someone who wants a quick and dirty rundown- this has a lot of information in it and would be a decent starting point.
Profile Image for Des.
178 reviews6 followers
dnf
November 17, 2018
This is going to be a DNF for me. Not a big fan of how the stories are told - I went in hoping for honest full retellings and instead got someone's second hand paraphrasing of mythology they'd heard elsewhere.
Displaying 1 - 29 of 29 reviews

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