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One copy is available
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Man by Maxim Gorky, translated by Ozren Subotić (Vukovar, 1905), is a philosophical and literary work that glorifies the dignity of man, his creative power, freedom of spirit, and the fight against social injustice.
A historical and cultural-topographical work by Radoslav Lopašić, depicting the past, settlements, fortifications, population and cultural heritage of the areas along the Kupa and Korana rivers. It is supplemented with contributions by Emilij Laszowski.
A poignant nonfiction book in which the award-winning novelist and journalist sharply criticizes Western indifference to the war in Gaza, hypocrisy, and the limits of compassion in the modern world.
"Poetic Prose" by Silvij Strahimir Kranjčević (1912) is a posthumous selection of his prose works. Edited by Julije Benešić and Vladimir Gudel, with a foreword by Milan Marjanović. Contains selected stories and essays.
Tolstoy interprets the 1905 revolution as a moral upheaval: violence does not bring justice, but a new yoke. He sees lasting liberation in personal conscience, non-violence and Christian love, not in the state and coercion.
The book contains the author's important essays on Ivan Mažuranić (Chancellor and Ban), Vladimir Mažuranić, and the centenary of the Croatian National Revival. A significant national-critical and historical-essay publication.