
Iz tame svijeta
Dževad Karahasan, a master of essays and prose, brings together three collections of short stories created over 35 years of creative work in the collection From the Darkness of the World: Royal Legends (1980), House for the Tired (1993/2014), and Reports
The title evokes marginalized worlds – forgotten by others and God – where darkness is not just the absence of light, but an excess of meaning and a lack of reality, and Bosnia becomes a visible image of the invisible heart of the world.
Structurally, all three are collections of longer stories that form a rounded whole: Royal Legends has a ring-shaped form like One Thousand and One Nights, set in the Middle Ages, where the stories emerge from one and mirror it, exploring desire and fear in court intrigue. The House for the Tired spatially and characterically connects characters in isolation – tired of life, separated, in advanced years, living behind closed doors, where living turns into melancholic waiting. Reports from a Dark Vilayet connect the stories with the war in Bosnia, drawing the characters in with their inner turmoil; Bosnia is a black hole that reveals hidden truths, and the clocks symbolize the eternal wait between life and death.
General themes – melancholy, emotional blockage, inability to act, latent fear and hope – dissect the Balkan psyche: "Our concept of freedom is infantile... we are nature that can no longer bear itself, but still rejoices in itself... we have forgotten that life can be shaped and that living can be art."
Karahasan's style is monological, deeply rooted in characters, with rare dialogue and an omniscient, sometimes unreliable narrator. The poetic language, dense and luminous, mixes stream of consciousness with reflections on the city, gardens and the world, suffocating the plot with a wisdom that demands a multifaceted reading. This anthology, a chronicle of darkness and light, celebrates Bosnia as a microcosm of Europe, where darkness is born from the heart of the world.
One copy is available





