Will be welcomed by teachers in search of an anthology for use in undergraduate courses in Jewish and early Christian apocalyptic literature,---Religious Studies Review. The texts are taken from standard English editions and are arranged according to the model developed by the Society of Biblical Literature's Genres Project. 352 pages, softcover. Hendrickson.
An edited collection of Jewish and Christian apocalyptic literature with introductions by Reddish. The editor is a mainstream liberal scholar. Of note is how many of these writings were obviously influenced by Revelation, which, IMO, kicks the date of its authorship back before Domitian.
Faithful translations of the extra-biblical apocalyptic literature, but riddled with unnecessary speculation and unsubstantiated claims (usually to take the view that undermines Biblical authority).
My curiosity is satisfied. The various writings of this genre in this collection, for a Christian, are not canonical scriptures. The depictions of the last days and the afterlife amount to speculation. That there will be abundant blessings for the holy and disaster and torment for the unholy sum up the content of these writings. It became monotonous, but I endured to the end, so to speak. From what I have gathered, Dr. Reddish has provided the only manageable collection of apocalyptic literature written in English. It is useful to read a few of them, if only as a contrast to similar writings in the Holy Scriptures. But for the most part their value consists in being historical literature for scholars to analyze. But one can rate the content here or the value of familiarity with these writings. I'll go with the latter.