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Crescent City Books in Order: Complete Series Reading Guide (2026)

Every Crescent City book in order — House of Earth and Blood, House of Sky and Breath, House of Flame and Shadow — with the SJM universe crossover explained and where to start.

By James Hartley

Crescent City is the third and most contemporary-feeling of Sarah J. Maas’s series — set in a Midgard that looks like our world but is populated by Fae, angels, shifters, demons, and witches, all coexisting under a ruling authority called the Asteri. It is the series that ultimately brings Maas’s full universe together, and the reading order includes an unusual prerequisite: you should complete the ACOTAR main trilogy before reading Crescent City Book 3.

Quick answer: House of Earth and BloodHouse of Sky and BreathHouse of Flame and Shadow. Read the ACOTAR main trilogy first for the full crossover experience in Book 3.


All Crescent City Books at a Glance

#TitleAbbreviationYearNotes
1House of Earth and BloodHOAB2020Start here
2House of Sky and BreathHOSAB2022Major universe expansion
3House of Flame and ShadowHOFAS2024SJM universe crossover

Prerequisite reading: Complete ACOTAR (Books 1–3) before Book 3.


Book 1 — House of Earth and Blood

House of Earth and Blood (2020) is the longest single SJM novel — approximately 800 pages — and the series’ establishing volume. It introduces Bryce Quinlan, a half-Fae woman who works at an antiquities gallery and lives the life of a Crescent City party girl, and Hunt Athalar, a fallen angel who is a slave to the ruling Asteri, tasked with investigating a series of murders.

The murders connect to Bryce’s past and to a power she doesn’t understand she possesses. The investigation drives the plot; the slow-burn relationship between Bryce and Hunt is the emotional engine. The book establishes the Crescent City world in considerable detail — the social structure of the city, the hierarchy of creatures, the political power of the Asteri, and the mythology that will become central in later books.

HOAB is the most tonally distinct of Maas’s series openers — grittier, more explicitly adult, more urban in feel. It takes more pages than the other series’ first books to find its full momentum, but the final act delivers emotionally and sets up the rest of the series with considerable ambition.


Book 2 — House of Sky and Breath

House of Sky and Breath (2022) expands the Crescent City world significantly — introducing new characters, new power factions, and the beginning of the hints that tie the series to Maas’s larger universe. The relationship between Bryce and Hunt develops further, and the political threat from the Asteri becomes more immediate.

Book 2 is where the series finds the pace and ambition that HOAB was building toward. The ending is the most discussed moment in the pre-Book 3 Crescent City community — a crossover tease that caused significant BookTok speculation for two years between publication and House of Flame and Shadow.


Book 3 — House of Flame and Shadow

House of Flame and Shadow (2024) is the SJM universe payoff that readers of all three series have been waiting for. The crossover content involving ACOTAR and Throne of Glass characters is present and significant — not a cameo, but a plot element that matters to the resolution of the Crescent City arc.

The book has generated significant reader discussion about the crossover quality and how well it honours the characters from all three series. Reading all preceding series — the full ACOTAR trilogy and the complete Throne of Glass series — maximises the emotional impact of what HOFAS does with those characters.


The Full SJM Reading Order

For readers who want to read all three series in an order that maximises the crossover payoff:

  1. Throne of Glass series (7 books + prequel) — establishes characters who appear in HOFAS
  2. ACOTAR series (4 books) — the most celebrated; essential before HOFAS
  3. Crescent City (3 books) — the crossover payoff

Each series is independently readable. Only the Crescent City crossover requires prior series knowledge. See the Sarah J. Maas Books in Order guide for the complete overview.


Frequently Asked Questions

Is Crescent City a good starting point for Sarah J. Maas?

No. Crescent City Book 3 contains major spoilers for ACOTAR. The recommended starting point is either A Court of Thorns and Roses (ACOTAR Book 1) or Throne of Glass (ToG Book 1). Start Crescent City after at least completing the ACOTAR main trilogy.

How long does it take to read the Crescent City series?

The three books total approximately 2,400 pages — comparable in length to the ACOTAR series. House of Earth and Blood alone is 800 pages. At an average reading pace, the full series takes two to three weeks.


For the full Sarah J. Maas author overview, see the Sarah J. Maas Books in Order guide. For other Fae and romantasy recommendations, see our Best Romantasy Books roundup.


Affiliate disclosure: Links on this site are affiliate links. We earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. This does not influence our editorial recommendations.

Frequently Asked Questions

What order should I read the Crescent City books?

Read in publication order: House of Earth and Blood → House of Sky and Breath → House of Flame and Shadow. The series must be read sequentially — each book builds directly on the events of the previous one.

Should I read ACOTAR before Crescent City?

Yes — strongly recommended. Crescent City Book 3 (House of Flame and Shadow) contains major crossover content involving ACOTAR characters. Reading it without completing the ACOTAR main trilogy will significantly diminish the impact of those crossover moments and will spoil key ACOTAR plot points. Complete at least ACOTAR, ACOMAF, and ACOWAF before starting Crescent City.

Is Crescent City Sarah J. Maas's best series?

Most readers consider ACOTAR (specifically A Court of Mist and Fury) to be Maas's peak, with Throne of Glass also frequently cited as exceptional. Crescent City is the most divisive of her three series — some readers love its urban fantasy tone and more explicit content; others prefer the pure high-fantasy aesthetic of ACOTAR. It has the strongest crossover moments of all three series.

What is Crescent City about?

Crescent City is set in Midgard — a contemporary-feeling world where Fae, angels, shifters, witches, humans, and other creatures coexist in a society that looks superficially modern. The series follows Bryce Quinlan, a half-Fae party girl with a complicated past, as she investigates a murder and becomes embroiled in a conflict that threatens every world she knows.

How does Crescent City connect to Throne of Glass and ACOTAR?

All three of Sarah J. Maas's series are set in the same multiverse. The connections are minor in Crescent City Books 1 and 2 but become a major plot element in House of Flame and Shadow (Book 3), which features direct crossover appearances from characters in the other series. Reading Throne of Glass and ACOTAR before Book 3 is essential for the full impact.

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