![]() It also reads more like episodes of a TV show, which is refreshing and emblematic of just how different it is. Too long for one book of Killing Eve, but too short for two (of traditional length). The plot twists keep coming quick and fast, and we are 464 pages into the Killing Eve saga. What I find intriguing is the abandonment of traditional methods in the writing. ![]() Apart from the fact that there is a very twisted Stalinist prison cell, which has complicated reasons for existence… The mad and outrageous situations continue. As to how she escapes book 2… or does she? is yet to be known. Villanelle does not have many people she is close to, but Lara Farmayants is one of them. And a trilogy truly would be the perfect length for this story. Careening towards a dramatic final twist which sets up a third novel. Extremely glamorous, with a touch of the absurd. The plot develops, quickly but not rushed. The eight stories in ‘No Tomorrow’ feel more like chapters, even if to start with, they appear to be a continuation of the novellas. ![]() Having seen various reviewers complain of part 1’s almost detached parts, I must note that they haven’t done their research, for if they had, they would realise that they were four seperate novellas. The second, and to date, last, part of the Killing Eve series is less episodic and more dramatic than ‘Codename Villanelle’. ![]()
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