Ratings10
Average rating4.5
"Four months after the explosion at the Garden, a place where young women known as the Butterflies were kept captive, FBI agents Brandon Eddison, Victor Hanoverian, and Mercedes Ramirez are still entrenched in the aftermath, helping survivors in the process of adjusting to life on the outside. With winter coming to an end, the Butterflies have longer, warmer days of healing ahead. But for the agents, the impending thaw means one gruesome thing: a chilling guarantee that somewhere in the country, another young woman will turn up dead in a church with her throat slit and her body surrounded by flowers. Priya Sravasti's sister fell victim to the killer years ago. Now she and her mother move every few months, hoping for a new beginning. But when she ends up in the madman's crosshairs, the hunt takes on new urgency. Only with Priya's help can the killer be found--but will her desperate hope for closure compel her to put her very life on the line?" --
Featured Series
4 primary booksThe Collector is a 4-book series with 4 primary works first released in 2012 with contributions by Chris F. Holm and Dot Hutchison.
Reviews with the most likes.
Familiar characters but a new vibe
I feel like I know this group of characters, but this one took it to a new level. I couldn't put it down but this one was more heart-wrenchimg than suspenseful.
[b:The Vanishing Season 40173806 The Vanishing Season (The Collector, #4) Dot Hutchison https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1542060712l/40173806.SY75.jpg 62323493]The End of a SeriesIf you haven't picked up any of the books in this series please go back and start at book one. If you don't you might be able to follow along but you will miss so much of the story it will be a shame. The Vanishing Season is the final installment to Dot Hutchinson's The Collector Series. The kidnapping of blonde-haired, blue-eyed eight-year-old Brooklyn Mercer throws FBI agent Eliza Sterling and co-worker/boyfriend Agent, Brandon Eddison, into the limelight.Battling memories of the abduction of his eight-year-old sister decades earlier, Brandon and other retired agents never able to move past seventeen other cold cases, come together to stop a string of kidnappings spanning the United States and lasting decades.This story is masterfully told from the perspective of Eliza, who physically resembles the victims to a T. Her likeness forces her both into the shadows to avoid raising painful memories with the families as well as into the forefront of the investigation when the Crimes Against Children team needs to force their hand.I enjoy novels that offer more than a singular storyline, and this book has many — from Eliza's struggle to overcome an abusive past, Bran's unbridled rage and pain at losing his sister, and the Butterfly girls moving past the trauma of being held captive by the Gardener, to Priya's acceptance of her sister's murder. This fourth book in the series ties up all running plot lines.My only criticism was the final chapter, which dumped a lot of information on the reader with a jarring shift in point of view. That aside, The Vanishing Season was an engrossing novel full of fear, compassion, and love. I will miss this flawed and scarred cast. I hope that this author puts out more books in this genre because she has a way of drawing her readers in and making them stay hooked. This was a solid four-star read and would have been a five I wasn't sad to see this series be done.