Epic of Gilgamesh
Akkadian (earlier Sumerian sources)
Humanity's oldest sustained literary work — a king's bewildered grief at the death of his friend, and his failed quest to outrun his own death.
Egyptian Book of the Dead
Middle Egyptian (hieroglyphic and hieratic)
Funerary spells, hymns, and gate-passwords copied onto papyri and tomb walls to guide the deceased through the perils of the underworld to a justified afterlife.
Rig Veda
Vedic Sanskrit
The oldest surviving text in any Indo-European language — 1,028 hymns of praise, cosmology, and ritual addressed to the gods of the Vedic pantheon.
The Avesta
Avestan
The hymns and rituals of Zoroastrianism, where the cosmos is a battlefield between truth and the lie.
The I Ching
Classical Chinese
The Book of Changes — sixty-four hexagrams that map every situation a human being can be in, and the moves that fit each one.
Upanishads
Sanskrit
A library of philosophical dialogues that turn the outward Vedic ritual inward, locating the divine within the self.
The Book of Job
Biblical Hebrew
The Hebrew Bible's anguished masterpiece on innocent suffering, divine silence, and the answer that comes from the whirlwind.
The Analects of Confucius
Classical Chinese
Brief, lucid sayings of Confucius and his disciples that became the moral grammar of East Asian civilization.
Tao Te Ching
Classical Chinese
Eighty-one short chapters of paradoxical poetry attributed to Laozi, teaching the way of the unforced, the soft, and the empty.
Book of Enoch
Aramaic / Ge'ez
An ancient Jewish apocalypse, preserved fully only in Ethiopian Christianity, in which the patriarch Enoch tours the heavens and exposes the rebellion of the Watchers.
Bhagavad Gita
Sanskrit
A 700-verse dialogue between the warrior Arjuna and the god Krishna on the eve of catastrophic battle, embedded in India's longest epic.
The Dead Sea Scrolls
Hebrew, Aramaic, Greek
The library of an apocalyptic Jewish sect hidden in desert caves on the eve of Rome's destruction of Jerusalem.
The Book of Revelation
Koine Greek
The cosmic, terrifying, hope-haunted vision that closes the Christian Bible — written by an exile to a church under Roman boot.
Gospel of Thomas
Coptic (translated from Greek)
A collection of 114 sayings of Jesus with no narrative — no birth, no miracles, no crucifixion — recovered in 1945 from the sands at Nag Hammadi.
The Nag Hammadi Library
Coptic (translated from Greek)
A buried jar of Coptic codices that returned the lost voices of Christian Gnosticism to the world.
The Kojiki
Classical Japanese / Old Japanese
Japan's oldest chronicle — a recitation of how the kami, the islands, and the imperial line were born from the primal waters.
The Zohar
Aramaic
The foundational text of Kabbalah, weaving mystical interpretation around the hidden architecture of God.
Tibetan Book of the Dead
Tibetan
Whispered instructions for the consciousness of the dying — a guidebook through the dazzling, hallucinatory passages between this life and the next.
Popol Vuh
K'iche' Maya
The K'iche' Maya council-book — a creation epic, a tour of the underworld, and the chronicle of a people who learned the gods would only be content when made of maize.
The Guru Granth Sahib
Gurmukhi (Punjabi, Braj Bhasha, Sanskrit, Persian, Arabic)
The eternal living Guru of the Sikhs — a 1,430-page poetic scripture treated not as a book about God but as God's living teacher.