U registraturi

U registraturi

Ante Kovačić

The author tells the fate of poor Ivica Kičmanović, who comes from a village in Zagorje to study in the city.

Over the course of thirty years, Ivica's childhood, youth and early mature years are covered until the tragic end - suicide in the burning registry office. The work is a peculiar mixture of realism and fantasy, naturalism and romance.

Editor
Dragan Jeremić
Graphics design
Ljubomir Pavićević Fis
Dimensions
17 x 12.5 cm
Pages
518
Publisher
Branko Đonović, Beograd, 1963.
 
Distribution: 8,000 copies
 
Latin alphabet. Hardcover.
Language: Croatian.

Two copies are available

Copy number 1

Condition:Used, excellent condition
Damages or inconvenience notice:
  • Traces of patina

Copy number 2

Condition:Used, excellent condition
Damages or inconvenience notice:
  • Signature of previous owner
  • Traces of patina
 

Are you interested in another book? You can search the offer using our search engine or browse books by category.

You may also be interested in these titles

U registraturi

U registraturi

Ante Kovačić
Jugoslovenska knjiga, 1950.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Hardcover with dust jacket.
7.99
Djetinjstvo i školovanje Ivice Kičmanovića

Djetinjstvo i školovanje Ivice Kičmanovića

Ante Kovačić
Školska knjiga, 1966.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Paperback.
1.98
Pet stoljeća hrvatske književnosti # 49 - U registraturi

Pet stoljeća hrvatske književnosti # 49 - U registraturi

Ante Kovačić
Zora, 1962.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Hardcover with dust jacket.
4.99
Šamforova smrt

Šamforova smrt

Erih Koš
Narodna knjiga, 1986.
Serbian. Latin alphabet. Paperback with dust jacket.
4.34
Proročanstvo Romanovima

Proročanstvo Romanovima

Steve Berry

Steve Berry is one of the best-selling contemporary authors of thrillers, whose works have been published in more than forty countries, in forty-one world languages, and have been on the bestseller lists around the world for months.

VBZ, 2010.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Paperback.
6.544.94 - 6.58
Mrtvi kapitali

Mrtvi kapitali

Josip Kozarac

The very title of the novel tells us how Kozarac was preoccupied with the uncultivated, dead land that is waiting for a man, a hardworking peasant, who will cultivate it. He called it "dead capital".

Nolit, 1969.
Serbian. Latin alphabet. Hardcover.
2.68