
Please Stop Helping Us: How Liberals Make It Harder for Blacks to Succeed
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In Between Extremes, Muharem Bazdulj reflects on the space of the former Yugoslavia through three essays on Bosnia, the common past, and contemporary Serbia. With warmth and irony, he reveals the similarities, differences, and paradoxes of our region.
The best-selling Croatian journalistic book of 2009. The author, long-time journalist and editor of Nacional Berislav Jelinić (who succeeded Pukanić as head of the weekly), wrote it just a year after the assassination on October 23, 2008 in Zagreb.
In Glavaš – Chronicle of a Destruction, Drago Hedl reveals the rise and fall of Branimir Glavaš, through a story of power, crime, and moral decline in post-war Slavonia. The documentary research turns into a poignant chronicle of our society.
The author, journalist and editor, follows the events of the second half of the 1980s, the breakup of Yugoslavia and the fight for Croatian independence in his diary entries.
Academician Ivan Aralica, the most widely read and most productive living Croatian writer, has completed the manuscript of his new book, titled "The Stink of Rotting Corpses," two years after his hit book "The Mental Communist."
This collection brings together political texts, interviews, speeches and public appearances by Ivo Banac from the key period of the breakup of Yugoslavia and the rise of Croatian statehood.