Sirius: Biblioteka znanstvene fantastike - broj 64
Joanna Russ, Ted Reynolds, William F. Wu, Ward Moore, Bojan Meserko, Ulf Miehe, Walter Ernsting, Ambrose Bierce, Branko Pihač, Ray Bradbury, Ray Russell, Alen Harapin, Fritz Leiber
Sirius was a Croatian science fiction magazine. The foundation was proposed by Damir Mikuličić in 1976. In Sirius, the works of domestic authors, as well as translations of foreign SF authors, were published. It was published from 1976 to 1989.
John Wilson was excited about his thirteenth birthday for two reasons: the first was that he would be greeted at home by his grandmother's delicious cake, and the second was that his grandmother would finally reveal the secret about his parents.
STEPress, 2002.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Hardcover.
9.98 €
American literature • Teen Novels • Thriller • Science Fiction
The novel The Endless Journey by Beth Revis is the first part of a science fiction trilogy for young adults of the same name. It was published in 2011 and combines elements of thriller, dystopia, and love story.
Znanje, 2011.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Paperback.
4.38 €
American literature • Novel • Science Fiction
"Star Wars: The New Rebellion" is a stand-alone work within the Star Wars Expanded Universe (now known as Legends), set in the New Republic era, approximately 17 years after the events of Return of the Jedi (Battle of Yavin).
"From Fragile Wings to Spaceship" (1968) by Josip Modly is a popular science book that depicts the development of human flight, from the first attempts to construct aircraft to modern space exploration.
Školska knjiga, 1968.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Paperback.
4.16 €
British literature • Detective Stories • Thriller • Science Fiction
The first part of a trilogy about Takeshi Kovacs – a dark, violent, but intellectually provocative SF noir. The world of the future in Morgan's Digital Carbon is a cruel extrapolation of globalization, but at its core it is a classic noir crime novel.
Predrag Vuković's book "Star Wars" convincingly and interestingly explains the entire atomic-laser process, from Hiroshima and Nagasaki, to "Star Wars", the horrific militarization of space.