A. E. Van Vogt, Ursula Le Guin, Branko Pihač, Terry de Ville, Vladimir Tarnovski, Clifford Simak, Želimir Sunara, Robert Silverberg, Roger Zelazny, Alexei Panshin, Walter M. Miller Jr., Ralph Williams
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
Žarko Vodinelić, Božidar Stančić, Zoran Milović, Bruno Ogorelec
Anne Mccaffrey, Vladimir Rybin, A. E. Van Vogt, Robert Sheckley, Robert A. Heinlein, Kurt Vonnegu...
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.
Radivoj Papić, Terry Carr, A. E. Van Vogt, István Kaszás, Ray Russell, T. P. Caravan, Ray Bradbur...
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. E. Van Vogt, Gradimir J. Moskovljević, Diana Nemanja, H. B. Fyfe, Ray Bradbury, Murray Leinste...
Sirius was a Croatian science fiction magazine. The foundation was proposed by Damir Mikuličić in 1976. In Sirius, the works of domestic authors were published, as well as translations of foreign SF authors. It was published from 1976 to 1989.
This is a book for anyone who wants to ask themselves about the future of a world in which power, concentrated in the hands of an ever-narrower circle of people, attempts to destroy or marginalize everything that is different.
Kršćanska sadašnjost, 1975.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Paperback.
6.85 €
Francuska književnost • Science Fiction • Popular Science
The Doom of the World is the first part of Flammarion's vision of the distant future. Through scientific assumptions and philosophical reflections, he depicts the gradual weakening of the Earth and the first signs of the end of human civilization.
The atmosphere seems dark and tense, with themes of the collapse of civilization, fear of the unknown, and the conflict between science and superstition.