![]() ![]() In a hotel room in Venice, where she's just completed a routineĪssassination, Villanelle receives a late-night call. deftly shaped towards an excellent denouement in which both women revolt against their male bosses and the organisations behind them." ―Sunday Times The echoes of Ian Fleming and John le Carré are deafening and the ensuing double-crossing and switch-hitting outspoofs them both." ―Evening Standard In the end, it’s just the two of them, playing by rules only they understand. As Eve locks onto Villanelle’s trail, I wanted to show that pursuit, no matter how pitiless, is also a kind of courtship, he said of No Tomorrow. His Villanelle books, of which No Tomorrow is.show more. Once again the reader is treated to a banquet of minced spies. Jennings told Entertainment Weekly that he sees No Tomorrow as part two of a trilogy. Luke Jennings is a London-based author and journalist who has written for the Observer. Like his remarkable crackpot assassin, Jennings goes his own sweet way. " Forget the overrated TV series, Luke Jennings's tales of Sapphic slapstick work better on the page and this sequel to Codename Villanelle ignores the events of Phoebe Waller-Bridge's adaptation. ![]() The basis for KILLING EVE, now a major BBC TV series, starring Sandra Oh and ![]()
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