I was in a bookshop the other day with a friend, and this book called to me. I am a superfan of mythology, but had never heard of some of my favourite ancient deities - Medusa, Hekate, Kali, Nyx, Athena, Lilith - being referred to as dark moon goddesses. This is more of an examination of how these women fit into the stories we tell ourselves, from matriarchal societies to present times, and how the images and stories of these women shifted as men came in power, and new, patriarchal religions flourished. I particularly loved the parts where the author brought in Freud, Jung, and Campbell's analysis, and I loved the chapters on Nyx and Lilith, whom I knew about but not in depth. The triplicate nature of Nyx, in particular, and the triplicate nature of her daughters (the furies, the fates, etc.), and how that aligns with the triplicate cycles of the moon, is intriguing.