Sirius: Biblioteka znanstvene fantastike - broj 60
Snežana Bulić-Atanasković, Carl Jacobi, Avram Davidson, Eric Frank Russell, Richard S. Mcenroe, Mladen Jurčić, Tamás Sámathy, E. A. Grosser, Robert A. Heinlein
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.
Translation
Božidar Stančić, Ingrid Jurela-Jarak, Aleksandar Gvoić, Zlatko Glik, Bruno Ogorelec
Mack Reynolds, Branko Pihač, Miroslav Tanasijević, Nenad Puljić, Aleksandar Manić, Dragan R. Fili...
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.
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.
On Ryloth, a planet crucial to the Empire as a source of slave labor and the precious narcotic called "spice," a resistance movement against the Empire has emerged.
Bill Johnson, Susan Wade, Geoffrey A. Landiss, Goran Konvični, James Patrick Kelly
Futura magazine was a Croatian magazine for speculative fiction, primarily for science fiction literature. The first issue of Futura was published in October 1992.
Fred Saberhagen, Marina Jadrejčić, Robert Lynn Asprin, Robert A. Heinlein, Romana Kovačić, Tomisl...
Futura magazine was a Croatian magazine for speculative fiction, primarily for science fiction literature. The first issue of Futura was published in October 1992.
The novel Nevolje sa Tiho was originally published in 1961 and in a sense marks the end of the first phase of Simak's creativity - namely, the one dominated by the "space opera" tradition.