Most best-of book lists have the same flaw. They dump thirty titles in no order, mix serious scholarship with pop paperbacks, and leave you to guess which one to open first. Two new ranked reading orders on Skriuwer fix that for two subjects people search for constantly and rarely find good guidance on. Both are arranged so the foundational book comes before the deep dives.
Best Books About the Occult
The occult shelf is a minefield. Half of it is careful history written by academics and sceptics, and half is practitioner manuals that assume you already believe. Most lists blend the two, which helps no one. The new Skriuwer guide keeps them separate and gives you an actual reading order, from a clear illustrated overview to the primary texts and the scholarly histories most lists skip.
The short version: start with a modern illustrated history to map the territory, add a readable account of how mysticism shaped the modern world, and only then decide whether you want alchemy, Hermeticism, witchcraft, or secret societies. Jumping straight to the dense classics is exactly how people give up.
Full guide here: Best Books About the Occult
Best Books About Ancient Mesopotamia
Most history readers know far more about Rome and Egypt than about the civilization that came before both. Mesopotamia gave us the first cities, the first writing, the first laws, and the first epic poem, and the best way into it is a narrative survey first, then the specialist studies, then the primary sources.
The guide ranks the strongest options and tells you exactly where to begin: a single readable history for the timeline, a daily-life account to see how people actually lived, and the Epic of Gilgamesh to hear these people in their own words. It also covers the kings who built and broke the early empires and the nineteenth-century rediscovery that pulled the whole civilization back out of the sand.
Full guide here: Best Books About Ancient Mesopotamia
Why ranked reading orders
Both lists rank by what readers actually verify on Amazon rather than by editorial fashion, and both sort the picks so a complete beginner can move to genuinely well-read without stalling on the wrong book. If you want more in the same style, Skriuwer keeps a full history collection and a religion and belief collection, each ordered for readers rather than padded for word count.
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