Novel

Mrtve duše

Mrtve duše

Nikolaj Vasiljevič Gogolj

Dead Souls (1842) is a brilliant satire that exposes the moral and social rot of imperial Russia through Chichikov's fraud with dead serfs, with Gogol's virtuoso mix of humor, irony and lyricism.

Jutarnji list, 2004.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Paperback.
4.99
Mrtve duše

Mrtve duše

Nikolaj Vasiljevič Gogolj

Dead Souls (1842) is a brilliant satire that exposes the moral and social rot of imperial Russia through Chichikov's fraud with dead serfs, with Gogol's virtuoso mix of humor, irony and lyricism.

Veselin Masleša, 1969.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Hardcover with dust jacket.
6.984.89
Mrtvi kapitali

Mrtvi kapitali

Josip Kozarac

"Dead Capitals" (1890) is one of the most important works of Croatian realism and a strong critique of the social stagnation of the time. The novel shows the economic and social neglect of Slavonian villages under the Austro-Hungarian Empire through the c

Mladost, 1961.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Paperback with dust jacket.
3.82 - 3.98
Mrtvi kapitali

Mrtvi kapitali

Josip Kozarac

The very title of the novel tells us how Kozarac was preoccupied with the uncultivated, dead land that is waiting for a man, a hardworking peasant, who will cultivate it. He called it "dead capital".

Nolit, 1969.
Serbian. Latin alphabet. Hardcover.
2.68
Mrtvi kapitali

Mrtvi kapitali

Josip Kozarac

"Dead Capitals" (1890) is one of the most important works of Croatian realism and a strong critique of the social stagnation of the time. The novel shows the economic and social neglect of Slavonian villages under the Austro-Hungarian Empire through the c

Mladost, 1971.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Hardcover.
3.56 - 6.22
Mrtvi kapitali

Mrtvi kapitali

Josip Kozarac
Zora, 1962.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Paperback.
1.32 - 2.16
Mrtvo more

Mrtvo more

Petar Šegedin
Kultura, 1953.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Paperback with dust jacket.
5.99
Mrvački brod

Mrvački brod

Bruno Traven
Matica hrvatska, 1968.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Hardcover.
5.65
Mudroslovna Tereza

Mudroslovna Tereza

Therese the Wise (1748) is an erotic novel by an anonymous author (probably the Marquis d'Argens), mixing the philosophy of the Lumières with explicit scenes. With an introduction by Michel Camus and a foreword by Philippe Roger.

Logos, 1988.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Hardcover with dust jacket.
7.36
Muke po Veneri

Muke po Veneri

Lucija Stamać
Meandar, 2001.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Paperback.
4.98