(Edited 8/7/24 - I did, in fact, read at least one more book last autumn, 17. Our Game, by John Le Carre, it was the first of his I read; I found it at the book sale at the "Wallingford Wurst Festival." On the last day all the books were $1.)
I don't actually know if this is a complete list, 2023 ended in a blur, and I seemed to have been keeping track of things in multiple places. It's possible I read something between August and December, but perhaps I didn't finish anything. If the library system ever comes back up and I'm able to look it up, I might see what else, if anything I might've have read. I remember wanting a third book to go with 15 and 16 on this list, and I think I might have read it.
Going backwards then:
16. Consider the Women: A Provocative Guide to the Matriarchs of the Bible, Debbie Blue. (Haggar, Esther, and Mary.) (12/28/23)
15. The Making of Biblical Womanhood-How the Subjugation of Woman Became Gospel Truth, Beth Allison Barr. (12/20/23)
I read these two because there is a source for why we do what we do, and it's not that it was handed down by God as a given. I went out and bought a large print Bible around this time, I wanted to find the ones that kept the women in and didn't change the names to men's names. There were women doing the early church ministry alongside men, but over time and to suit the political aims, their names were either changed to a male version (such as Junia) or the work was diminished (omitting the title of Deaconess.)
14. Fifty Things That Aren't My Fault: Essays from the Grown-up Years, Cathy Guisewite (the creator of the "Cathy" comic.) (8/20/23)
13. Mud Ride: A Messy Trip Through the Grunge Explosion, Steve Turner, w/Adam Tepedelen. (No date.)
Kinda' fun to recognize people and places.
12. Artist. Yeong-shin Ma, translated by Janet Hong. (7/15/23)
Graphic novel about three friends struggling through life and what changes when one of them makes it big.
11. The Pilgrimage, Paolo Coelho. (7/4/23)
10. Gender Queer: A Memoir, Maia Kobabe. (7/4/23)
Graphic novel, banned in places. There wasn't a target audience or age range listed, maybe that would've helped with the outrage. The section in question is maybe one page, and honestly, kids are seeing more shocking things on tv and the internet. Is that an excuse? No, but maybe it would've helped to name the target audience for it. A lot of children's/preteen material does list that. Is it salacious? No. If anything, there's a level of depression that was concerning to me. It's one person's search to figure emself/eir sexuality out, and then how to explain it. If it helps someone feel less alone, that's probably a good thing.
9. The Alchemist, A Fable About Following Your Dream, Paolo Coelho. (6/10/23)
8. Notes on Directing, Frank Hauser and Russell Reich. (No date)
7. Baggage, Tales From A Fully Packed Life, Alan Cumming. (No date)
6. Becoming Free Indeed: My Story of Disentangling Faith from Fear, Jinger Duggar Vuolo. (No date)
5. The Carrying. Poems. Ada Limon. (No date)
4. Suddenly, Last Summer, Tennessee Williams. (No date)
3. Dinosaurs, A Novel, Lydia Millet. (No date)
2. Remarkably Brilliant Creatures, Shelby Van Pelt. (No date)
1. Rilke's Book of Hours; Love Poems to God. Rainer Maria Rilke, Translated by Anita Barrows and Joanna Macy. (No date).