
Ruski prozor
Perhaps the greatest virtue of Velikić's writing, which culminated in this novel, is his extraordinarily refined feeling for life's details, which he depicts and evokes with an almost shamanic power of materialization.
In the novel Russian Window, Dragan Velikić creates a three-part "omnibus novel" about exile, questioning identity and the transience of life. The first chapter is narrated by Danijel, an aging conductor who introspectively questions his own destiny; the second forms the core of the narrative, following Rudi Stupar, a Vojvodina native and an unsuspecting actor, who flees Belgrade in the chaos of the nineties and passes through Budapest, Hamburg and other European centers. The final, third part consists of a series of short confessions by other characters, who comment on Rudi's life and leave him in a different light. Through a complex narrative structure - fragmented memories and asymmetrical narrative units - Velikić builds an atmosphere of melancholic reflection, where Russian Window represents a "photo point": a small depiction of life, a cross-section of inner aspirations and memories. The style is refined and precise, often poetic, so the prose balances between intellectual essay and intimate confession. The themes touch on exile, the search for a spiritual home, and the establishment of a balance between personal destiny and the broader historical dynamics. Throughout his wandering existence, Rudi carries an introspective burden of nostalgia and failure, at the same time imbued with humor and self-irony as a resistance against petty-bourgeois fate. The novel was awarded the prestigious NIN and Meša Selimović, and has also received recognition from critics in the region and abroad. Critics emphasize its "methodical play" between individual and collective history, intertwined with spiritual and emotional warmth.
One copy is available





