This will be an ecumenical matter. 
Some non-Protestant Bibles include "the Apocrypha". We all know this. However, an examination of these Bibles shows that "the Apocrypha" isn't a consistently-defined body of work the way, for example, "the New Testament" is. Some English versions of the Bible exclude certain books entirely while still claiming to include the Apocrypha with no limiting qualifiers.
I've done some research of my own, looking through Amazon previews of various versions and perusing through local Christian bookstores. Thus far, I've found that the "most comprehensive" Apocrypha in one place can be found in the ESV, RSV, NRSV, and CEV. It includes the following works:
Tobit
Judith
Additions to Esther
--Chapters 11-16
Wisdom
Sirach
Baruch
Letter of Jeremiah
Additions to Daniel
--Prayer of Azariah
--Susanna
--Bel and the Dragon
1 Maccabees
2 Maccabees
1 Esdras
Additions to Psalms
--The Prayer of Manasseh
--Psalm 151
3 Maccabees
2 Esdras
4 Maccabees
At first, I thought that was it. I had never seen an apocryphal work in an English Bible that wasn't in that list... until I came across the New English Translation of the Septuagint (NETS), an English translation of the Greek version of the Jewish Bible. In addition to all the above books (save 2 Esdras, which is not extant in Greek), it includes one book that is not present in the aforementioned versions:
Psalms of Solomon
That discovery was what prompted this thread: I wondered if there were other books that only appeared in one or a few obscure translations that I had overlooked. I'm here to ask for help from people familiar with the contents of English Bibles that include the Apocrypha: What are all the books that appear in at least one scholarly English translation of the Bible? Let me clarify what I mean:
1.) The volume must contain a complete translation of either the universal 66 books or at least the entire Jewish canon (which is the same as the Protestant Old Testament). This disqualifies books that serve the sole purpose of collecting apocryphal/pseudepigraphal works, like M.R. James' New Testament Apocrypha.
2.) For the sake of this discussion, anything not in the 66 traditional books is considered "apocryphal", although the term "deuterocanonical" may be more appropriate for some works.
3.) The "scholarly" qualifier is to make sure the book isn't exclusive to a cult or some other non-Trinitarian sect. That disqualifies the works of Joseph Smith, for example.
Some non-Protestant Bibles include "the Apocrypha". We all know this. However, an examination of these Bibles shows that "the Apocrypha" isn't a consistently-defined body of work the way, for example, "the New Testament" is. Some English versions of the Bible exclude certain books entirely while still claiming to include the Apocrypha with no limiting qualifiers.
I've done some research of my own, looking through Amazon previews of various versions and perusing through local Christian bookstores. Thus far, I've found that the "most comprehensive" Apocrypha in one place can be found in the ESV, RSV, NRSV, and CEV. It includes the following works:
Tobit
Judith
Additions to Esther
--Chapters 11-16
Wisdom
Sirach
Baruch
Letter of Jeremiah
Additions to Daniel
--Prayer of Azariah
--Susanna
--Bel and the Dragon
1 Maccabees
2 Maccabees
1 Esdras
Additions to Psalms
--The Prayer of Manasseh
--Psalm 151
3 Maccabees
2 Esdras
4 Maccabees
At first, I thought that was it. I had never seen an apocryphal work in an English Bible that wasn't in that list... until I came across the New English Translation of the Septuagint (NETS), an English translation of the Greek version of the Jewish Bible. In addition to all the above books (save 2 Esdras, which is not extant in Greek), it includes one book that is not present in the aforementioned versions:
Psalms of Solomon
That discovery was what prompted this thread: I wondered if there were other books that only appeared in one or a few obscure translations that I had overlooked. I'm here to ask for help from people familiar with the contents of English Bibles that include the Apocrypha: What are all the books that appear in at least one scholarly English translation of the Bible? Let me clarify what I mean:
1.) The volume must contain a complete translation of either the universal 66 books or at least the entire Jewish canon (which is the same as the Protestant Old Testament). This disqualifies books that serve the sole purpose of collecting apocryphal/pseudepigraphal works, like M.R. James' New Testament Apocrypha.
2.) For the sake of this discussion, anything not in the 66 traditional books is considered "apocryphal", although the term "deuterocanonical" may be more appropriate for some works.
3.) The "scholarly" qualifier is to make sure the book isn't exclusive to a cult or some other non-Trinitarian sect. That disqualifies the works of Joseph Smith, for example.