Carica

Carica

Shan Sa

She was born in the fabled Tang Dynasty in the seventh century. She grew up on the banks of the Long River, where she learned to tame horses. She entered the imperial gynaecology, where ten thousand concubines lived.

She witnessed murders, conspiracies, betrayals, and became the Empress of China. She survived war, famine, and epidemics. She raised Chinese culture to its peak, surrounded herself with poets, calligraphers, and philosophers. From the most beautiful palace in the world, she ruled the world's largest empire. She became the Holy Emperor Who Turns the Golden Wheel. Her name was slandered, history was distorted, and memories were erased: men took revenge on a woman who dared to become emperor. After thirteen centuries, she opens the doors of the Forbidden City for the first time... Chinese writer Shan Sa was born in Beijing in 1972, and her last novel, "The Empress," was a great success in France in 2003.

Original title
Imperatrice
Translation
Suzana Kubik
Editor
Milana Vuković Runjić
Graphics design
Boris Runjić
Dimensions
21.5 x 13.5 cm
Pages
318
Publisher
Vuković & Runjić, Zagreb, 2005.
 
Latin alphabet. Paperback with dust jacket.
Language: Croatian.

One copy is available

Condition:Used, excellent condition
Damages or inconvenience notice:
  • 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

Zemlja sreskih galebova

Zemlja sreskih galebova

Radovan Ždrale
Globus, 1988.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Hardcover with dust jacket.
4.99
Deobe

Deobe

Dobrica Ćosić

Deobe is a novel about the tragic division of Serbs into Chetniks and Partisans during World War II. Winner of the NIN Award, it is part of a wider epic trilogy, inspired by Ćosić's experiences and historical documents.

Prosveta, 1963.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Hardcover with dust jacket.
13.74
Sveti lopov

Sveti lopov

William Ryan
Znanje, 2013.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Paperback.
3.76
Noć

Noć

Edgar Hilsenrath

A poignant novel describing life in a Jewish ghetto in Ukraine, based on the author's experience as a Holocaust survivor. Set in the fictional town of Prokov, the novel follows the inhabitants of the ghetto, especially Raneko, as they struggle to survive.

August Cesarec, 1982.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Hardcover with dust jacket.
6.58
Sjene koje plešu

Sjene koje plešu

Alojz Rebula
Globus, 1981.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Paperback.
7.50
Truba za Bleiburg

Truba za Bleiburg

Marino Zurl

Marino Zurl (1929–2006), a Croatian writer and publicist, writes in his novel Trumpet for Bleiburg about one of the most controversial and taboo topics in Croatian history – the Bleiburg Massacre and the Stations of the Cross in 1945.

Brkić i sin, 1997.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Paperback.
14.68