I've been studying this for a little while now, and as far as I know, and I'm probably wrong, but I don't think there is one.
There is not a core text, but there are four essential history books to the Shinto religion.
The two most sacred Shinto books are the 'KOJIKI' and the 'NIHONKI'.
The Shinto holy book is the O'dno Jing (Book of Salvation)
The Shinto holy book is the O'dno Jing (Book of Salvation)
There is none.
The holy books of Shinto are the Kojiki and the Nihon-gi. These books are compilations of ancient myths and traditional teachings that had previously been passed down orally.
There are no "holy cities" in Shinto. Each Shrine is considered to be the home of a God/dess. There are 1000's of Shrines in Japan.
some of the holy days are matsuri, rei sai and more
its January 3 its like Christmas its called hajik
There is no Shinto "Bible" or Holy Scripture its a very optimistic, open faith where there are no rights or wrongs in what you believe and believes that humans are fundamentally good but can and will make mistakes. Also there is hardly any preaching or convincing to join
the shinto has there birthday and the holy day
the nihongi and the kojiki
Living on an island gives no indication of a person's religion.See this list of islands:Taiwan's people practice Chinese Folk Religions and worship at shrines. There are typically no books involved.Honshu is a place where Shinto is practiced at Shinto temples. There are typically no books involvedJava has predominantly Muslim worship at mosques. There they read the Qur'an.Ireland has predominantly Christian worship. There they read the Bible.Madagascar has predominantly animist worship at local ancestral places. There is no holy book read.Haiti has a large percentage of Voodoo worshipers. They have important oral traditions but no specific holy book.
The Holy Bible
Sikhs and Jews do not share any of the same holy books.