Feniks

Feniks

Milovan Tatarin
Editor
Julijana Matanović
Graphics design
Marina Ćorić
Dimensions
20 x 12 cm
Pages
285
Publisher
Matica hrvatska, Zagreb, 2004.
 
Latin alphabet. Paperback.
Language: Croatian.
ISBN
9-53-185091-7

One copy is available

Condition:Unused
Damages or inconvenience notice:
  • Library stamp
 

Are you interested in another book? You can search the offer using our search engine or browse books by category.

You may also be interested in these titles

Dani hvarskog kazališta. Počeci u hrvatskoj književnosti i kazalištu

Dani hvarskog kazališta. Počeci u hrvatskoj književnosti i kazalištu

Maja Bošković Stuli, Dunja Fališevac, Milovan Tatarin, Lahorka Plejić Poje, Pavao Pavličić, Helen...
Hrvatska akademija znanosti i umjetnosti (HAZU), 2008.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Paperback.
9.99
Nebo nad Osijekom: intimistički zapisi

Nebo nad Osijekom: intimistički zapisi

Stanko Andrić, Ljerka Antonić, Wolfgang Bahr, Josip Cvenić, Branko Čegec, Nedjeljko Fabrio, Aleks...

The monograph Sky over Osijek is intended as a collection of intimate writings about the city on the Drava River, Osijek. The authors of the published texts are mostly writers who live in Osijek or have once passed through Osijek and then often visit it.

Matica hrvatska, 2003.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Hardcover.
14.52
Knjižarevo obećanje: Cliff Janeway istražuje

Knjižarevo obećanje: Cliff Janeway istražuje

John Dunning

The Bookseller's Promise is the third book in the Cliff Janeway series by the award-winning John Dunning, an unusually talented and unique American writer.

Algoritam, 2006.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Paperback.
4.50 - 4.68
Godan

Godan

Munshi Prem Chand
Kosmos, 1960.
Serbian. Latin alphabet. Paperback.
4.22 - 4.26
Usta puna zemlje

Usta puna zemlje

Branimir Šćepanović

The novel "Usta puna zemlje" (1970), the masterpiece of the Serbian writer Branimir Šćepanović, is a psychologically in-depth explorer of the limits of the human soul, solitude and existential freedom, reminiscent of Kafka and Camus.

BIGZ, 1987.
Serbian. Latin alphabet. Paperback.
3.98
Zagrepčanka

Zagrepčanka

Branislav Glumac

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.

IROS, 1986.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Hardcover.
8.24