Buybook
Sarajevo
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Titles in our offer
Razgovori s Markom
"Conversations with Marko" by Almin Kaplan is a collection of intimate interviews with the poet Marko Vešović, a great name in Bosnian literature. The poet Marko Vešović symbolizes resistance: a poem against the darkness of war and poverty.
Schindlerov lift
In Prijedor, a small town in Bosnia, thirty years after World War II, two "skyscrapers" rise – red and blue. In the red sky, the lives of residents of different destinies, nations and religions intertwine.
Solo
It is a novel about Ulrich, a centenarian from Bulgaria, his life and fantasies.
Sve ono što u džepove nije moglo stati
Adnan Žetica's eye is focused on the space and time that flows through him; he is an observer who finds a poem in the little things that, in a small number of verses, exposes and shows the world in all its baseness, but also its beauty.
Titove pjesme
Through scenes from the life of a single street, Bratić, it seems to me, manages to faithfully portray the state of our entire planet, and with it humanity.
Treće lice jednine
The third person singular is a very complicated and somewhat tricky stylistic device because all the characters in the novel are actually the author himself, and none of them are.
Tri knjige: Poljska konjica / Knjiga žalbi / Po suhu đemija
Three Books by Marko Vešović is a book that includes his three poetry collections, Poljska konjica in an updated edition, Knjiga žalbi (2010), and a previously unpublished collection titled Po suhu đemija.
Uhvati zeca
Catch a Rabbit is strong evidence that the female writing boom in Bosnia and Herzegovina continues, to the delight of all readers of first-class literature.
Umiruće tijelo politike: Rat - konstitucija nacionalnog tijela
The philosophical and theoretical study by a Bosnian-Herzegovinian author analyzes how the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina from 1992 to 1995 was a biopolitical project of creating a "pure" national body through the systematic killing, expulsion, and rape of
Uoči svetkovine
It's the night before Anna's festival in the middle of the East German flatland of Uckermark. The village of Fürstenfelde is asleep. The ferryman is not – he's dead.









