Žene koje vrište u sebi

Žene koje vrište u sebi

Nives Madunić Barišić

Lorna is a social worker, Urša is a retired harpist from the National Theatre, Tajra is a psychologist, and Tina is a very young mother and wife exposed to domestic violence.

When Tina seeks help at the Social Work Center, the lives of these four women begin to intertwine. While Lorna tries to understand when and how her own life slipped out of her hands, Urša struggles with unbearable poverty like most pensioners in Croatia, Tajra has a hard time dealing with prejudice, racism and her own rebellious character, and the youngest of them, Tina, lives exposed to daily brutal physical and verbal violence from her father-in-law and tries to protect her young sons and unborn child. Four women of different ages, destinies and personalities at a certain turning point in their lives are drawn into a web of relationships through which they change and finally free themselves.

Editor
Emica Calogjera Rogić
Graphics design
Ana Pojatina
Dimensions
21.5 x 14 cm
Pages
427
Publisher
Naklada Ljevak, Zagreb, 2024.
 
Latin alphabet. Hardcover with dust jacket.
Language: Croatian.

One copy is available

Condition:Used, excellent condition
 

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

Strasti i druge pripovijetke

Strasti i druge pripovijetke

Isaac Bashevis Singer

Winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1978, Isaac Bashevis Singer is a prolific writer of novellas and short stories. And in this collection of short stories, the author's penchant for mysticism, grotesque, folklore and eroticism is expressed.

Svjetlost, 1986.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Hardcover with dust jacket.
6.42
Usta puna zemlje

Usta puna zemlje

Branimir Šćepanović

The novel "Usta puna zemlje" (1970), the masterpiece of the Serbian writer Branimir Šćepanović, is a psychologically in-depth explorer of the limits of the human soul, solitude and existential freedom, reminiscent of Kafka and Camus.

BIGZ, 1987.
Serbian. Latin alphabet. Paperback.
3.96 - 3.98
Rudnik čvaraka

Rudnik čvaraka

Tomislav Šovagović

The debut work of Croatian writer Tomislav Šovagović, awarded the Josip and Ivan Kozarac Award in 2012, is a dedication to Slavonia – the region of his childhood that the author, born in Dalmatia, observes with foreign but tender eyes.

Mozaik knjiga, 20112.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Paperback.
11.56
Andrićeva lestvica užasa

Andrićeva lestvica užasa

Svetislav Basara

A Serbian writer known for his satirical novels, Andrić's Ladder of Horrors dissects the Balkan mentality through a parable of Yugo-nostalgia and national myths. The title alludes to Ivo Andrić as a litmus test for criticism – Balkans claim him or reject

24 sata, 2021.
Serbian. Latin alphabet. Paperback.
11.56
Đavoli dolaze

Đavoli dolaze

Miodrag Bulatović
Rad, 1986.
Serbian. Latin alphabet. Paperback.
1.16
Knjižarevo obećanje: Cliff Janeway istražuje

Knjižarevo obećanje: Cliff Janeway istražuje

John Dunning

The Bookseller's Promise is the third book in the Cliff Janeway series by the award-winning John Dunning, an unusually talented and unique American writer.

Algoritam, 2006.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Paperback.
4.50 - 4.68