
Pet stoljeća hrvatske književnosti #36 - Pučki igrokazi XIX. stoljeća
Five Centuries of Croatian Literature (PSHK) is the largest publishing project in the history of Croatian literature.
Two copies are available

Five Centuries of Croatian Literature (PSHK) is the largest publishing project in the history of Croatian literature.
Two copies are available
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Do you like "lovelies"? Whatever you think about them, you'll enjoy this superb pastiche of trivial romance novels.
The novel One Hundred Years by Dario Harjaček provides a panoramic view of Trešnjevka and its inhabitants through a century of changes, ideologies, and human destinies – a mosaic of Zagreb in which life, art, and history intertwine.
Milčec is still just as in love with the city. He conquers it just as youthfully. The siege of Zagreb has made no one smaller. The city grows and the conqueror continues to conquer the unconquerable.
The title poem, "The Black Rabbit," represents a kind of symbolist maneuver within "real" poetry, because like Baudelaire's "Albatross," it possesses a pronounced unambiguous charge.
Imagine Zagreb in the 1980s, where behind the gray facades of apartment buildings lies a dream world of the far West – Hollywood, freedom and endless possibilities. Tribuson, a master of Croatian prose, here combines genres into one fluid story that bites
In The House Where the Devil Dwells, Tribuson also thematizes the time of new poverty, crazy jokes on the way to earning money, usury, jealousy, revenge, strikes, and murders.