
Omiške strele
No copies available
The last copy was sold recently.

No copies available
The last copy was sold recently.
Are you interested in another book? You can search the offer using our search engine or browse books by category.
"The Drunkard" by Mijat Stojanović (1869) is a folk tale adapted from I. A. Stelzig. A moralistic story about the harmful effects of alcoholism, intended for the general public. A classic example of 19th-century enlightenment literature.
"The Gjurković Daughters" (1893) by Ferenc Herczeg (1863–1954) is a humorous novel about the adventures, loves, and everyday life of three lively daughters of the Hungarian noble Gjurković family.
One of the most prolific Croatian realists and early naturalists with a strong right-wing orientation, in this book he brings together two stories from the Zagreb bourgeois milieu: Poisoned Hearts (1890) and Whitened Graves (1896).
Invisible Queen: Historical Stories from Bosnian Croatia is a collection of six historical stories in which Štefa Jurkić portrays the life, faith, and identity of Croats in Bosnia through events from the past.
A collection of short stories by one of the most important Slovak writers of the 20th century, Jozef Hronsky, known for works such as Jozef Mak and Pisár Gráč. Realistic-psychological stories from Slovak rural and small-town life.
"Flower Under Glass" by Antun Matasović is a collection of short stories, presenting the early stories of the Slavonian Catholic writer with motifs of family, love, everyday life and moral dilemmas. A classic regional reading between the two wars.