No More Tomorrows by Olivia Lockhart and Hal Lambert
No More Tomorrows
by Olivia Lockhart and Hal Lambert
No More Tomorrows by Olivia Lockhart and Hal Lambert was published early in 2026.
My thanks to Olivia for sending me a copy to review and to
Rachel's Random Things for inviting me onto the tour.
Synopsis
Two eras. One aching heart.
1917 – At Cambridge University, American scholar Harry Turchin never expects to lose himself to desire. But Annie Mackenzie—soft-spoken, grieving, and luminous—claims his heart from their very first kiss. Their love is swift, fierce, and intoxicating. Married just days before Harry is sent to war, their passion is ripped apart when the trenches claim everything he knows, and Harry is thrown into a future that should not exist.
1967 – The free-spirited sixties are alive with rhythm, rebellion, and possibility. Harry awakens to a world he doesn’t recognise—and to Annalise Taylor, as bold and captivating as the era itself. Brilliant, independent, and achingly alive, she rouses a desire he thought belonged solely to the past.
Caught between the love he was ripped away from and the passion he cannot resist, Harry is torn between two women, two lives, and two versions of forever. Because time will not bend twice … Or will it?
Sweeping from the blood-soaked battlefields of World War One to the fevered nights of the swinging sixties, No More Tomorrows is a sensual time-slip romance about desire, devotion, and the devastating power of love that refuses to be bound by time.
My Thoughts
I absolutely loved this time travel story from the very first word to the very last. This is a beautiful story about love, loss , trust and sacrifice told from the perspectives of Harry and Annalise. It is a moving and compelling read that has you easily turning the pages between the short chapters that initially move between 1917 and 1967 centred on the discovery of a suitcase full of letters.
It may also be a story that gets you thinking about the possibility and feasibility of time travel along with the alignment of the planets and their scientific importance in whether two time zones can meet. Whether or not you believe in this, or not, will not detract from how the story develops , looking at the world through both Harry’s and Annalise’s eyes and how they learn to trust and implicitly love one another.
For me this was one of those lovely books that you don’t want to finish whilst also wanting to know what happens.
A beautiful read that can be consumed in a few hours and will leave you with a warm, fuzzy glow.
About Olivia
When not writing she can be found drinking wine, cuddling with her beloved pooch, or with her head in a book.




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