A Court of Wind and Wings is the third standalone book in the interconnected series Legends of Love. This time, we’re focusing on Hades and Phaedra, who we met in the last book. Hades is Helena’s uncle, and Phaedra was his assistant. There were clearly romantic vibes going on between them! This picks up where we left them off. With Phaedra badly injured in the attack by Phelix. As it turns out, she’s in a coma. So this book has a bit of a different style. The beginning has Phaedra’s POV only in flashbacks from when she and Hades met 50 years ago. At least until we hit the point in the story she gets going in present day! While Hades has a lot of time without her in the beginning, sorting out his own issues!
Hades has been instructed by his mother, communicating via his brother, that he must marry. Phaedra isn’t even an option. Not only is she in a coma, she has a boyfriend! Gasp! I will say it felt like there was a bit of a disconnect with her character from last book to this one. There she seemed interested in Hades, and was a complete badass. While here, she’s never thought of his romantically at all since he’s her boss, and she doesn’t seem to fight really. But it’s easily looked over, and it’s possible I’m missing something here! But either way, Hades goes on a bunch of comically bad dates with different royal characters to try to find himself a wife.
Of course, once Phaedra wakes up, quits her job and dumps her boyfriend, Hades gets a wake up call from his mother, and he decides he can only marry her. This sets us on a really fun Hades and Persephone retelling. Someone even jokingly gets her name wrong and calls her Persephone! We have the kidnapping (how she began working for him), a forced marriage, and an arguing couple that clearly does like one another! I really enjoyed this part of the story. The first half with Hades was definitely entertaining as he bumbled through trying to date, but his interactions with Phaedra are wonderful.
The two of them have a lot of chemistry, and have spent 50 years working together, so there’s definitely a rapport there. Hades loved once and lost his wife tragically, so he’s been fighting his feelings due to guilt over moving on. While Phaedra has trauma from her mother’s parenting that has left her closing her heart off to everyone. The slow break down of their walls, as they become friends and then something more, is fabulous. The issues they’re facing though get in the way of their progress. Phelix is still determined to destroy them all and take over. And then there’s the public and paparazzi to deal with as well.
Phelix making his move actually managed to surprise me in the way it went down! I didn’t seem some of the betrayal coming even with the hints. I guess I just can’t imagine anyone going against Hades, in any universe! But it made for a great plot! Phaedra is taken, and Hades snaps. It’s here we meet his mother, and their interaction was so interesting. The history and complicated feelings there were fascinating and I wished we’d gotten even more of Fortuna! But sometimes it’s better to keep the larger gods and goddesses more mysterious. I think it worked in the books favor in truth! The showdown that follows is appropriately riveting!
I loved where Hades and Phaedra wound up. All of these books have a HEA, so I knew to expect it, but it was still thrilling after everything that went down during the course of the story! They’re an adorable couple really. Hades is too cute when he’s in love. We also get to see characters from the other books here, which I always love. The big wedding for Helena and Erik was definitely amazing to see. And the epilogue wrapped things up in such a perfect way. I loved that they didn’t go back on a certain aspect of Hades character for a more typical HEA. I think that message is too important. And families come in all shapes and sizes!
I received an eARC of this book. This is my honest review left voluntarily.