Crusade wraps up the Empires trilogy, the plotline that focuses on the Tuigan Horde, and their invasion of Kara-Tur and Faerûn. Like Dragonwall, the book is written from the point-of-view of those fighting against the Tuigan. In this case, that would be one Azoun of Cormyr, and his Crusade. Being as that Azoun is a character who is directly featured in other novels, has supporting roles in other novels, or is simply mentioned in other novels, I would have rather gotten another point-of-view from the Tuigan side. One last time, you know?
The best part of the book was the first half or so, when Azoun was struggling to build a coalition to fend off the Tuigan, and for many reasons. For one, Faerûn is a place that lacks continent-wide international governmental bodies, like the United Nations. The twists and turns that Azoun had to go through to procure the help of everyone- Sembians, Dalefolk, Orcs, Dwarves, and more- was interesting. I’m not too big of a fan of the old “make the ‘good guys’ look like hypocrites when the ‘bad’ guys’ want to do good”, but in this case, that entire schpiel really helped the book- that stuff adds to the total political jockeying that was going on.
The ending was sub optimal, to put it lightly. The ending was not only an ending for the book, but also an ending for the entire trilogy, spanning three books and over well five hundred pages. I didn’t like the way that the ending was written, or what actually happened. In lieu of writing how King Azoun bested Yamun Khahan, James Lowder cheated, in a way. On that final battle, it was written that Azoun didn’t remember much of the struggle between himself and the Tuigan chief, except for fleeing emotions, and a few clear moments, such as when he cut off Yamun’s hand, or when he finally stabbed him in the heart, killing him forever.
That doesn’t bother me as much as the fact that Azoun actually slew Yamun. I can understand why it happened, being as that the conflict was mostly immovable object (Azoun) against immovable object (Yamun), and one had to give, ultimately, the one being “expendable” being Yamun, with Azoun having “plot armor” and all. But, still, Yamun should have bested Azoun and his crusade. Yamun Khahan possibly was the Chosen of Akadi (Teylas), and has withstood (over the course of the books) being struck directly with lightning, poison, and being stabbed, mostly in the heart, like Azoun did. To sum everything up, Yamun Khahan was killed thusly: Fell off of his horse into the mud, got his hand chopped off, was stabbed. Very anticlimactic. I wouldn’t mind Yamun Khahan being killed if it were in a better manner, whatever manner that might be.
And, even that aside, Azoun and his Crusade shouldn’t have ever even gotten that close to Yamun. The trick that the Crusade used- dig lots of holes, make lots of mud, and cover them all with illusions- seems tacky to the point that it should have been discovered. Given the tactics that we know the Tuigan employed, demonstrated in the first two books of the trilogy, the Tuigan tactics are never that “upfront” and “blunt”, to directly charge an opponent face-to-face committing your “real” force.
That aside, the ending and the events leading up to it felt forced and rushed, as if the author realized he was running out of space, and needed to sweep everything under the rug, and tie up all of the loose ends. Batu Min Ho, protagonist of the book before Crusade? Dead, neatly killed. King Torg of Earthfast? Dead, neatly killed. The Tuigan? Nearly 50,000 still remained, and because Yamun died, all 50,000 neatly fled back to the steppes. Koja? Given a “cushy job” in Cormyr. Vrakk? Off in Thesk, out of sight, out of mind. Hell, even Razor John, when he returned to Suzail, it was business as usual, for the most part, as if nothing too major happened.