
Kuća porculanske lutke
Two copies are available

Two copies are available
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Branislav Glumac published a novel without periods or commas in 1974, as the relentless stream of thought of a young rebel. Published in socialist Yugoslavia, the work caused a scandal with its openness and became a classic about generational rebellion.
The novel One Hundred Years by Dario Harjaček provides a panoramic view of Trešnjevka and its inhabitants through a century of changes, ideologies, and human destinies – a mosaic of Zagreb in which life, art, and history intertwine.
The title poem, "The Black Rabbit," represents a kind of symbolist maneuver within "real" poetry, because like Baudelaire's "Albatross," it possesses a pronounced unambiguous charge.
In this collection of stories, Pernjak deals with quite ordinary, everyday situations, but finds something new and original in them. These are thematically diverse stories that center on interpersonal relationships.
Marino Zurl (1929–2006), a Croatian writer and publicist, writes in his novel Trumpet for Bleiburg about one of the most controversial and taboo topics in Croatian history – the Bleiburg Massacre and the Stations of the Cross in 1945.
The novel, written in the first person, describes the complex, distant relationship between a sculptor (the narrator) and her mother. The main characters are the sculptor, a beauty mother obsessed with purity and bodily blemishes, and a stepfather, who en