This might have worked better as a book solely focused on Lilith, who the author seems to work with more within her practice as a goddess but I give her credit for paying homage to Eve and for giving us her upg of the sisterly bond between the two. I find that one of the most frustrating things about Lilith devotees is how they hold up Lilith as a Powerful Feminist icon and yet usually disrespect Eve in the process; calling her submissive or passive. Anyone who has the vaguest knowledge of the Eden myth should know that is absolute nonsense. But even besides that, pitting women against each other is simply misogyny in a feminist mask. So kudos to the author for giving Eve her due as a figure that sought divine knowledge over meek obedience.
That's pretty much where my praise for the book ends however. There is very little authentic research on Lilith that hasn't been pulled from Wikipedia. The author is of a Christian background and while I don't believe one needs to be Jewish to work with Lilith I feel like they should have a better understanding of the lore. The author runs with the belief that Lilith was the 'original' woman mentioned in Genesis 1 but was then edited out of scripture back in the Bronze Age. There is simply no evidence for this and the folklore about Lilith being the "first woman" does not crop up until Jewish writings in the second century CE. The only mention of Lilith in the Bible occurs in Isiah and is referring to demons who are present in Mesopotamian mythology who seem to have no link to any Creation myth that we know of thus far. Little of this is brought up by the author, she prefers to portray Lilith as a strong feminine goddess who was 'demonised' when evidence points to the opposite. Many Lilith devotees I know of embrace her gladly as a Demon Mother or infernal in her own right, almost seperate from Jewish and Christian lore.
And then there's Eve, who as I said the author speaks slightly more kindly than she often gets from either Christians or Pagans, but still seems little compared to Lilith. It is a shame that the author seems unfamiliar with Gnostic and Sophian myths were Eve is elevated to a higher status. She is the embodiment of the Daughter of Divine Wisdom (Zoe Sophia) who wakes Adam by giving him a soul and a connection to God. For this, he calls her Mother of the Living. When the Goddess departs from Eve, leaving her human and ignorant, Zoe returns in the form of a serpent to tell Eve to eat the apple and remember her True Self. I feel the author would have found this interesting and seen parallels with her own theory that the serpent who instructed Eve was Lilith, returned to help her sister.
But even without the Gnostic remimagining of the Genesis myth, the author makes such common misteps as claiming Eve was created to be demure and submissive, again something not mentioned in the text. She also repeats the mistranslation that Eve was created from Adam's "rib", when most scholars today understand the word to be 'side'. Meaning Eve is literally just the other side of Adam, who in Jewish Mysticism is understood to have originally been Intersex. So woman was not created from man, but rather Human split into male and female. This is also found in the Gnostic myth and grants Eve a higher status than Adam (the male half) as it is She who awakens first and then wakes him via the breath of Sophia. She then does so again with the fruit of Knowledge.
I had hoped that my journey to find a book that praises Eve as a divine feminine figure worthy of veneration - alongside figures like the Madonna and the Magdalene - would be found here but sadly was not the case.