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Bride of Death

Netherworld Fae, Book 1

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A Persephone & Hades Retelling with a “Why Choose” Twist

The God of Death says I’m his long-lost bride.
His soul mate.
An Omega who betrayed him two thousand years ago.

He believes my memories are the key to our survival.
Only, they’re memories I no longer possess. Because I’m not who he thinks I am.

I’m Serapina, not Persephone.
A human, not an Omega.
And that knot he keeps talking about? Yeah, that’s not coming anywhere near me.

Except Hades isn’t the only one threatening to claim me with his knot. Morpheus, the God of Dreams, says I belong to him, too.

And don’t even get me started on Maliki, the sexy fae guard in charge of my captivity. That deadly fae has a body crafted in sin and a smirk that makes me question my sanity.

All three men want access to my nest. To my heart. To my mind.

It’s that last part that scares me most. Because if I truly am the Omega that betrayed my own kind, then I’m not worthy of being a Goddess. Let alone their Goddess. And what happens then?

Author’s Note: Bride of Death is book one of the Netherworld Fae trilogy and ends on a cliffhanger.

©2024 Lexi C. Foss (P)2025 Lexi C. Foss
Fantasy Sincère Mythologie grecque
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I really like this author and this audiobook was enjoyable, distinct voices for the individual characters. There was some extra bits that weren’t very informative, but overall good flow, ends on a cliffhanger can’t wait for part 2 in 2026

Distinct Character voices, Great Spinoff Story

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I really wanted to like this one... the premise had a lot of potential. But I just couldn’t get through it. The story kept looping over and over: Sera couldn’t remember anything, and Hades kept accusing her of playing some cruel game. He constantly complained about how she was tormenting him, had his court investigate her supposed “scheme,” yet never actually did anything himself. Meanwhile, she had no memory of him or their supposed bond, which made the whole dynamic exhausting after a while.

I finally stopped around the 60% mark because it just wasn’t going anywhere. It’s a shame, because I’ve enjoyed some of Lexi C. Foss’s other books and I really liked the narrators... but this one just didn’t work for me.

Wanted to love it, but...

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