The White Rose is the final Book of the North, providing a very satisfactory conclusion to this first arc of the series. I liked this about as much as Shadows Linger, though for slightly different reasons.
The banter between the Black Company members and Croaker’s wry, cynical, and terse narration remains a highlight, and so does the military action and strategy. These aspects have become staples and the main strength of the series after the first book. The plot involves the Black Company’s role in the conflict between the Lady’s Empire and the White Rose rebellion, while the Dominator seeks to rise from the Barrowlands once more. While I prefer the more cohesively compelling plot of Shadows Linger, this is still an excellent and engaging story.
What I loved about this book, however, was the setting. Cook really seems to have gone all out with his imagination crafting the Plain of Fear. A desolate landscape populated with all sorts of weird and crazy entities, flora, and fauna: sentient animals with their own councils, walking trees, menhirs and boulders that spew cryptic phrases, massive flying whales, and in the centre of the Plain the ancient, grumpy Old Father Tree. This setting was taken advantage of to the fullest, and I really enjoyed how the Black Company made use of the flying whales in their battles.
Bomanz the Wizard’s story is the secondary plotline, just like Marron Shed in Shadows Linger, though I prefer Shed’s arc of cowardly courage a tad more. The tale of his illicit research into artefacts of the Dominator and Lady’s previous Empire and the following family drama leading to the realisation of what he has wrought was great to read, and I liked the way it all tied into the central thread of the Black Company’s investigations. There was another side story, that of Philodendron Case and his friendship with the secretive Corbie, which was also pretty cool. All three converged near the end and revealed various pieces of information necessary for everyone involved to deal with and wrap up the overall story.
The Lady continues to be a fascinating character. Her insistence on recording the truth of the matter and her nuances besides just being an evil ruler are very intriguing, hinting at unknown depth the more is revealed about her. Her complicated and tumultuous relationship with the Black Company, and Croaker especially, are explored more. It comes to a head at the climactic battle, which was very satisfying in how it paid off many small things that had been built up over the three books. I do wish it had been longer or lingered more on the weight of everything that was going on, but what we got was great nonetheless. Overall, an excellent book that continues the surprisingly compelling story of the Black Company, concluding the first arc of the series that leaves a lot of interesting directions for the story to go in.