In this thread though, all I want are names of resources. I want to compile a list.
What good is such a list? You aren't going to read any of those books yourself, and neither will these prophecy-believers read any of them.
The best list of "resources" is simply a list of the Bible texts which are interpreted as prophetic. Then just read the text carefully, in its entirety. Just the "list" by itself is no good -- the text must be read carefully to see what it's really about.
The mere act of alerting them to the existence of other scholarly views may be something new to them.
Not at all. They know of contrary scholarly views and they just laugh at them (without ever reading them of course). I once heard a preacher ridiculing the scholars -- he referred to the scholars at "Princeton Theological Cemetery --- uh, sorry, I meant Seminary" and the congregation laughed. That's the closest they'll ever come to knowing or caring about those other scholarly views.
If all you do is give them this "list of scholarly resources" it's just one more item for them to laugh at for entertainment.
The best way you can help these prophecy-believers is first to study thoroughly one of the major prophecy claims yourself, i.e., the Bible text of it -- read the whole text, not just the famous phrase or summary, but the whole chapter, even 2 or 3 chapters, to give the whole context of the prophecy (or whatever it really is). Then, with minimum guidance from any expert, just look up anything about the historical context, such as what happened later that could be a fulfillment of that prediction. YouTube or Wikipedia is just fine -- easy for anyone to access. Nothing fancy.
So just study that prophecy and maybe a wiki page about it yourself, thoroughly, get the date of writing, etc. -- then you'll probably see many flaws in claiming it was a real prediction of the future. And then you'll have something serious to offer to those believers who are probably misinterpreting that Scripture. In almost every case they have not studied the complete Bible text and the historical context of it.
And the only "list" you need to offer them is the Bible text(s) per se, completely (only one is probably enough, but also 2 or 3 prophecy examples if you have the time), all the text of it along with anything claiming to explain it. Challenge them: "You've never really read that entire Bible text yourself -- you're just repeating this preacher's rhetoric without checking it out yourself." Once you or the prophecy-believer has done this reasonable homework, i.e., read the Sacred Text completely, and checked whatever commentary you can find, you'll get a good understanding of it, see the ambiguity in most cases, and the errors of those who misinterpret it.
Many believers begin to lose their faith in "prophecy" when they read that entire Bible text for themselves. Usually they are disappointed when they seriously check into it. This simple homework is all they are lacking, not a list of scholarly books claiming to explain it to the unenlightened.