****May Contain Spoilers!!!****
The Collector series have been books I have looked forward to every year since I read The Butterfly Garden. Each book, I have devoured faster than the last so naturally, I was very excited to get my hands on The Vanishing Season and see how this whole series would end. I will not sugarcoat this, I am so incredibly disappointed in this book.
I don't think it deserves one star but I also can't bring myself to give it three so two it is.
This book didn't feel like the others. The first three in The Collector series were filled with horror, shocking events, mystery, thrills, and sheer terror. There is less a focus on the agents in the other books, the focus is more on the victims and the perpetrators as we get to see into their psyche - something which I always found very well done and truly terrifying. The books occasionally made me feel queasy, upset, and horrified but this book just seemed to lack that. This book felt more like a personal anecdote about the FBI agents then the victims or the perpetrator. It takes a long time to set up the case and when it is set up and the perpetrator is found, it seems quite rushed and forced. It seems the true focus of this book is on the agents themselves and this seems to be the books downfall.
Although the characters are well-established (most of them) and well-loved at this point, the author continues to add more characters and changes back and forth from using their first and the last name. For the first few chapters, this got really confusing and every time a new character got added in, I was lost. The team, who we have seen as being professional, stoic, loyal, but also kind and people who truly care for what they do, seem to have become like a gaggle of teenagers in this book. There's a lot of them telling each other to 'fuck off' in 'jest', a lot of pages wasted on them joking with Sterling (the agent who is the focus of this book) on how she can't stop working and gets absorbed into it all. There's a lot of poking, prodding, pushing, shoving, and sneezing with laughter. Little actions that get annoyingly repetitive - especially during the middle of important case material. Sterling and Eddison's relationship starts to break down the workplace professionalism boundaries, which to be honest, annoyed me a lot. There's a little girl missing and a huge case happening and they are holding hands (yes, I know it's cause of Eddison's connection to the case but still) or even having a tiff over something, one of them hurting the other, and two chapters wasted on the fall out of that.
Alongside this, there were a lot of 'smushy' moments, which definitely felt too chic lit for me, who is a horror junkie. Too much focus on an unused wedding dress, the fact that Sterling has blonde hair and blue eyes, and that Eddison has the emotional range of a teaspoon. Not enough focus on the girl that has gone missing and her family. She seemed to be a forgotten thought for a long while. There was more focus on Eddison's missing sister.
I really tried to enjoy the book but it just didn't feel like how the others have felt before. It didn't grip me and it felt really rushed and repetitive. Far too many words were wasted on saying the same thing over and over again - like I am now.
To be honest, after reading this book, I am glad this series is over. It will mean the characters I have grown to love will stay how I remember them and no more can be squeezed out of them. I do highly recommend reading the first three but miss this out if you don't mind not getting a neatly tied up ending.