>>2367
I just looked through my harddrives, and I don't actually have such a list. There are just so many sources, and it all depends on what languages you're able to read and what topics you're already familiar with and so on.
It is important to note that the so-called Prose Edda is NOT a primary source on Nordic religion, as it is not only compiled by a christian (like almost all of our texts), but explicitly just fan fiction written to explain certain kennings in use in skaldic poetry at the time. Snorri was a poetry enthusiast. Some of the stuff in his writings is likely authentic, but it's pretty hard to tell as a layman.
The Poetic Edda (the actual Edda) is typically regarded as a mostly (kinda) authentic source. The Havamal is one of the poems of the Poetic Edda.
If you want to start with the Nordic stuff, start with the Havamal, then read the rest of the Poetic Edda.
Having grown up with all of it, read many translations and spent years studying it, I have come to the conclusion that it is much more reasonable to use the Greco-Roman texts as the structure to view our religion from. We have orders of magnitude more sources, with much less risk of christian tampering, and the sources are much, much older. This is also what our forefathers decided to do in the Renaissance and ever since: there are statues to the Greek and Roman gods all over Europe.