---
product_id: 208236646
title: "The Queen of Nothing (The Folk of the Air #3)"
price: "VT7563"
currency: VUV
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 10
url: https://www.desertcart.vu/products/208236646-the-queen-of-nothing-the-folk-of-the-air-3
store_origin: VU
region: Vanuatu
---

# The Queen of Nothing (The Folk of the Air #3)

**Price:** VT7563
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## Description

Buy The Queen of Nothing (The Folk of the Air #3) 1 by Black, Holly (ISBN: 9781471407598) from desertcart's Book Store. Everyday low prices and free delivery on eligible orders.

Review: Ooh I loved this book. - I wondered at reading previous books of Holly's and not getting into them. But this series has been absolutely brilliant. I have loved the characters, the language, the interaction of them all. The darkness, the story and the ending. It's nice to have a good ending, with all the points sorted out, no questions left unanswered. To those of you who've read the first two books, read on and fall into a new book and make new friends. Highly recommended.
Review: A fun and entertaining finale! - The Queen of Nothing has been one of my most anticipated releases of the year ever since its publication date was moved from January 2020 to November 2019, and I’m pleased to say it didn’t disappoint! Now exiled from the land of Faerie, despite being its High Queen, Jude is attempting to live her life in the mortal world with her older sister, Vivi, and their little brother Oak, taking on some odd jobs for other fae who dwell in the mortal world. When her sister Taryn turns up on their doorstep with some surprising news requesting Jude’s help, she can’t help but be pulled back towards Faerie and the place she considers home. Naturally, because it’s Jude, chaos ensues. It was so satisfying to see Taryn finally come into her own in this book, and for Jude, Taryn and Vivi to be a supportive little coven of sisters. I did spend a lot of the novel, much like Jude, nervous that Taryn might betray her again, but Taryn has finally found her own voice in this third and final book and no longer needs Locke and Madoc to make her decisions for her by using her. Seeing the three sisters finally working together was one of my favourite things about this book. But I can’t deny that I also loved all the scenes that Jude and Cardan shared. I don’t know what it is about this series that works for me because Cardan should be the kind of YA love interest I hate, but he and Jude are like two sides of the same coin and they just work. Cardan is a lot softer in this book than he’s been in the previous books, but given the glimpse into his past we’re given right at the beginning of this novel I think that makes sense and, to be honest, Cardan is the softer character out of him and Jude. That’s probably hard to believe in The Cruel Prince, when he and his friends are so darn mean, but Jude straight-up murders people throughout this series (and it’s awesome) whereas a lot of Cardan’s behaviour is a kind of armour he’s had to build up because of the world and family he’s been born into. I find him really interesting – he reminds me a little of Baz from Carry On, who’s also a secret soft mess under his layers of venom – and I enjoyed all of his scenes a lot. That doesn’t mean this book isn’t without its problems and I have a feeling it’s going to be a fairly polarising finale not because of its ending or anything, but because of the way we get to that ending. Like the other books in this trilogy, The Queen of Nothing moves along at quite a fast pace and there are plenty of moments that could have been drawn out or questions that could have been answered. For example, I thought we might learn a bit more about Jude’s parents, particularly her mother, and I’m surprised Cardan’s mother didn’t play a bigger part in the book. Then again, their stories have never really been the point of this trilogy. We can dive into the kinds of mothers they were all we like, but what really matters is how their parenting has left Jude and Cardan the way they are. Not only that but, in Jude’s case, the parent who’s had the most impact on her is Madoc; it’s Madoc who, for better or worse, has turned Jude into the scheming Slytherin queen she is. In a way I quite liked that Cardan’s mother teased Jude with the stories she could tell Jude about her own mother’s behaviour, but Jude never rises to that bait. Maybe one day she’ll learn more about her mother in her own time but, ultimately, Jude has got to where she is through her own blood, sweat and tears, and she doesn’t need stories about anyone who’s come before her to validate her. I kind of love that. I could see where the plot was going from fairly early on and I could guess the solution to the novel’s major problem straight away, but, honestly, I didn’t care. This series is just so much fun to read; these books are like popcorn, sweet and salty and moreish, and I’ve read this whole trilogy this year purely and simply to be swept away somewhere else and entertained. This final book continued to do that for me, and I really enjoyed it! I can’t even say I’m sad this series has now come to an end because a story arc has come to a close and it felt like a fitting ending, even if we did get to that ending a lot more easily than I expected, but I would love to see Holly Black write more books set in the world of Faerie because her world-building in this trilogy is one of my favourite things about it.

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| Best Sellers Rank | 3,001 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) 4 in Fairy Tales & Folklore for Young Adults 5 in Dark Fantasy for Young Adults 13 in Epic Fantasy for Young Adults |
| Book 3 of 3  | The Folk of the Air |
| Customer reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (56,036) |
| Dimensions  | 12.9 x 1.8 x 19.8 cm |
| Edition  | 1st |
| ISBN-10  | 1471407594 |
| ISBN-13  | 978-1471407598 |
| Item weight  | 430 g |
| Language  | English |
| Print length  | 320 pages |
| Publication date  | 23 July 2020 |
| Publisher  | Hot Key Books |
| Reading age  | 14 years and up |

## Images

![The Queen of Nothing (The Folk of the Air #3) - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71H5hmUnPHL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Ooh I loved this book.
*by M***R on 24 August 2024*

I wondered at reading previous books of Holly's and not getting into them. But this series has been absolutely brilliant. I have loved the characters, the language, the interaction of them all. The darkness, the story and the ending. It's nice to have a good ending, with all the points sorted out, no questions left unanswered. To those of you who've read the first two books, read on and fall into a new book and make new friends. Highly recommended.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ A fun and entertaining finale!
*by J***N on 25 November 2019*

The Queen of Nothing has been one of my most anticipated releases of the year ever since its publication date was moved from January 2020 to November 2019, and I’m pleased to say it didn’t disappoint! Now exiled from the land of Faerie, despite being its High Queen, Jude is attempting to live her life in the mortal world with her older sister, Vivi, and their little brother Oak, taking on some odd jobs for other fae who dwell in the mortal world. When her sister Taryn turns up on their doorstep with some surprising news requesting Jude’s help, she can’t help but be pulled back towards Faerie and the place she considers home. Naturally, because it’s Jude, chaos ensues. It was so satisfying to see Taryn finally come into her own in this book, and for Jude, Taryn and Vivi to be a supportive little coven of sisters. I did spend a lot of the novel, much like Jude, nervous that Taryn might betray her again, but Taryn has finally found her own voice in this third and final book and no longer needs Locke and Madoc to make her decisions for her by using her. Seeing the three sisters finally working together was one of my favourite things about this book. But I can’t deny that I also loved all the scenes that Jude and Cardan shared. I don’t know what it is about this series that works for me because Cardan should be the kind of YA love interest I hate, but he and Jude are like two sides of the same coin and they just work. Cardan is a lot softer in this book than he’s been in the previous books, but given the glimpse into his past we’re given right at the beginning of this novel I think that makes sense and, to be honest, Cardan is the softer character out of him and Jude. That’s probably hard to believe in The Cruel Prince, when he and his friends are so darn mean, but Jude straight-up murders people throughout this series (and it’s awesome) whereas a lot of Cardan’s behaviour is a kind of armour he’s had to build up because of the world and family he’s been born into. I find him really interesting – he reminds me a little of Baz from Carry On, who’s also a secret soft mess under his layers of venom – and I enjoyed all of his scenes a lot. That doesn’t mean this book isn’t without its problems and I have a feeling it’s going to be a fairly polarising finale not because of its ending or anything, but because of the way we get to that ending. Like the other books in this trilogy, The Queen of Nothing moves along at quite a fast pace and there are plenty of moments that could have been drawn out or questions that could have been answered. For example, I thought we might learn a bit more about Jude’s parents, particularly her mother, and I’m surprised Cardan’s mother didn’t play a bigger part in the book. Then again, their stories have never really been the point of this trilogy. We can dive into the kinds of mothers they were all we like, but what really matters is how their parenting has left Jude and Cardan the way they are. Not only that but, in Jude’s case, the parent who’s had the most impact on her is Madoc; it’s Madoc who, for better or worse, has turned Jude into the scheming Slytherin queen she is. In a way I quite liked that Cardan’s mother teased Jude with the stories she could tell Jude about her own mother’s behaviour, but Jude never rises to that bait. Maybe one day she’ll learn more about her mother in her own time but, ultimately, Jude has got to where she is through her own blood, sweat and tears, and she doesn’t need stories about anyone who’s come before her to validate her. I kind of love that. I could see where the plot was going from fairly early on and I could guess the solution to the novel’s major problem straight away, but, honestly, I didn’t care. This series is just so much fun to read; these books are like popcorn, sweet and salty and moreish, and I’ve read this whole trilogy this year purely and simply to be swept away somewhere else and entertained. This final book continued to do that for me, and I really enjoyed it! I can’t even say I’m sad this series has now come to an end because a story arc has come to a close and it felt like a fitting ending, even if we did get to that ending a lot more easily than I expected, but I would love to see Holly Black write more books set in the world of Faerie because her world-building in this trilogy is one of my favourite things about it.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ A brilliant end to the trilogy
*by S***L on 2 July 2025*

Loved this book, best book of the trilogy and gave me the ending I yearned for. The schemes were scheming! Great fantasy plot.

## Frequently Bought Together

- QUEEN OF NOTHING-FOLK OF AIR
- The Wicked King (The Folk of the Air #2)
- Powerless

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*Product available on Desertcart Vanuatu*
*Store origin: VU*
*Last updated: 2026-05-10*