Eugen Kumičić
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Gospođa Sabina
"Ms. Sabina" is a novel by Eugen Kumičić published in 1979 that explores complex interpersonal relationships and social norms in Croatia in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Gospođa Sabina
"Ms. Sabina" is a novel by Eugen Kumičić published in 1979 that explores complex interpersonal relationships and social norms in Croatia in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Mladost ludost
The novel Youth-Foolishness (1884) depicts the lives of young people in Dalmatia at the end of the 19th century. Set in Zadar, the novel follows the fate of a young lawyer, Frano Luković, whose passionate nature and rash decisions lead to tragic consequen
Olga i Lina
The novel "Olga and Lina" by Eugen Kumičić, a famous Croatian writer from the period of realism, is one of his works in which he explores complex interpersonal relationships, moral dilemmas and social norms.
Otrovana srca / Pobijeljeni grobovi
One of the most prolific Croatian realists and early naturalists with a strong right-wing orientation, in this book he brings together two stories from the Zagreb bourgeois milieu: Poisoned Hearts (1890) and Whitened Graves (1896).
Tri mučenice: Tri izvorne pripovijesti
Three Martyrs by Eugen Kumičić (1888) is a naturalistic novel about the fate of three women from different social classes who suffer because of love, social norms, and male selfishness in bourgeois Zagreb.
Urota Zrinjsko-Frankopanska
For about ten years, the novel was the most widely read book, which, thanks to the interest of the readers of that time in the historical events that marked the time of the conspiracy of Croatian and Hungarian noblemen against the Austrian crown, had a hu
Urota zrinsko-frankopanska
For about ten years, the novel was the most widely read book, which, thanks to the interest of the readers of that time in the historical events that marked the time of the conspiracy of Croatian and Hungarian noblemen against the Austrian crown, had a hu
Urota Zrinsko-Frankopanska
The novel "The Zrinjski-Frankopan Conspiracy" (1893) was the most widely read Croatian book for ten years, and, thanks to the interest of readers at the time in historical events, it had a huge influence on younger generations of readers.









