>>24655294
Get the Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith and read all of it, and read at least the first of the Lectures on Faith. Neither is LDS canon but both are very illuminating. Then read the Bible, Book of Mormon, Doctrine & Covenants, Pearl of Great Price. BoM is most interesting when it is explaining doctrine or taking a philosophical stance. But D&C and PoG are more condensed doctrine and philosophy, and so they (plus LoF and TPJS) are where you go for the deep stuff. In Paul's terms, the BoM is the milk. The meat is everything else. For more, you may want to research into the LDS revelations which haven't been added to the D&C yet. These are mainly revelations to Joseph Smith and John Taylor, plus a few to Wilford Woodruff. They're very interesting doctrinally. Lastly, supplement your study of the scriptures with the LDS edition of their scriptures with the footnotes (very good cross-referencing), and use resources like Biblical interlinears, Biblical commentaries, alternative Biblical translations, Strong's Concordance, and what theologians and secular historians both say about the Bible. For the rest of the LDS scriptures you can also research commentaries. Also not a bad idea to research into the ante-Nicene Church Fathers, there's surprising parallels with Mormon theology there. You can often find a lot of interesting Mormon speculation and research done on online spaces like the FAIR wiki and various Mormon blogosphere sites, in case you don't have access to commentaries in print. Sites like biblehub have integrated access to Strong's, multiple historical commentaries, interlinears, and alternative translations. Use everything you can find and master Mormon theology.