![]() ![]() The Folk of Air is exquisite enchantment–gorgeous, absorbing, lavish with magic, love, and conflict. And though the plan is that Jude will only go to Faerieland for a day or two, the moment Jude returns to Court, she’s again enmeshed in the fight for the throne, a seat that belongs now not only to Cardan but, unbeknownst to all, to her. ![]() Thus when her treacherous twin Taryn arrives at her door requesting that Jude temporarily swap places with her–Taryn has, astonishingly, murdered her utter prick of a husband, Cardan’s childhood friend Locke, and wants Jude, who cannot be glamoured to tell the truth, to pretend to be her during Taryn’s inquest–Jude agrees. She longs to return, to best Cardan, to seize the throne, to somehow get back who she was there, a self she simply isn’t in the mortal world. Living in Maine with her sister Vivi and her brother Oak, she spends her days watching brainless TV and her nights doing odd jobs for fairies. Until and unless she is pardoned by the crown, let her not step one foot in Faerie or forfeit her life.”Īs the final book in the trilogy, The Queen of Nothing, begins Jude is infuriated, embarrassed, and bored. ![]() “I exile Jude Duarte to the mortal world. This review contains spoilers for the first two books in The Folk of Air series.Īt the end of The Wicked King, the second book in Black’s marvelous The Folk of the Airseries, Cardan, the King of Faerie, banishes Jude to the mortal world decreeing: ![]()
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