J. G. Ballard, Tatjana Vranić, Ray Bradbury, István Szomohazi, Mauro Antonio Miglieruolo, Bertil Mårtensson, Ion Ilie Iosif, Christine Renard, Slobodan Ćurčić, Isaac Asimov, Fritz Leiber, Miodrag Đorđević, Mariya Mamonova, Theodore Sturgeon
Sirius was a Croatian science fiction magazine. The foundation was proposed by Damir Mikuličić in 1976. In Sirius, the works of domestic authors, as well as translations of foreign SF authors, were published. It was published from 1976 to 1989.
Empire of the Sun by J. G. Ballard is a war novel about a boy who survives the horrors of war during the Japanese occupation of China. The work depicts the loss of innocence, resilience, and the strength of the human spirit.
Znanje, 1987.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Hardcover with dust jacket.
Pete Adams, Charles Nightingale, Robert Sheckley, Branko Belan, Brian W. Aldiss, Arthur C. Clarke...
Sirius was a Croatian science fiction magazine. The foundation was proposed by Damir Mikuličić in 1976. In Sirius, the works of domestic authors, as well as translations of foreign SF authors, were published. It was published from 1976 to 1989.
A collection of essays on science fiction that explores its philosophical, cultural, and artistic dimensions and its influence on contemporary thought and popular culture.
The First Woman on Mars is, from the current point of view, a novel with a somewhat naive plot about a human journey to Mars. Against the backdrop of this plot, the author examines the relationship between humans and machines.
Kosmos, 1954.
Serbian. Latin alphabet. Paperback.
3.85 €
British literature • A philosophical novel • Social literature • Science Fiction • Biblioteka HIT
Faith for the Third Millennium is a futuristic novel by Colleen McCullough that examines the relationship between faith, science, and politics. In a world gripped by crisis, a charismatic healer appears whose message inspires hope but also provokes power
Znanje, 1987.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Hardcover with dust jacket.
4.32 €
Francuska književnost • Science Fiction • Popular Science
The second part of Flammarion's popular science work The Doom of the World (1894.). A speculative account of life on Earth in ten million years and the gradual end of humanity. Popular science with elements of science fiction.