(i.e. writings relating/pertaining to transcendental existences/experiences--not cheap horror or thrill type sci-fi, etc.--but those with intrinsic depths providing probing insights--shedding lights on our human paths. )
(i.e. writings relating/pertaining to transcendental existences/experiences--not cheap horror or thrill type sci-fi, etc.--but those with intrinsic depths providing probing insights--shedding lights on our human paths. )
Maybe "A Strange Story" by Edward Bulwer-Lytton could interest you.
What kind of mysticism do you prefer. Look for things by Katherine Kurtz. The Lord of Light by Roger Zelazny is oddly mystical. There are quite a few things that are part of the Golder Dawn movement.
"The Magus" by John Fowles.
I'm not sure whether this is what you're looking for really, but I would give The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories by Angela Carter a try.
Steppenwolf by Hermann Hesse. In fact I think most of his books concern individuals who undergo some kind of enlightening mystical experience. He was much influenced by the Eastern religions, Gnosticism and also the work of Carl Jung.
The best examples I can offer, to what you ask are, James Hogg's novel The confessions of a justified sinner AND Byron's closet drama Manfred.
I'd try Heart of Darkness, assuming you haven't read it already. The horror therein is so profound it borders on the metaphysical and -- as Marlow (the storyteller) discovers -- it's not communicable.
Also, regarding the "shedding lights on our human paths" -- consider War and Peace.
William Blake
Thomas Traherne
George Herbert
Henry Vaughan
Christopher Smart
William Butler Yeats