Sirius: Biblioteka znanstvene fantastike - broj 89
Slobodan Ćurčić, Michael Shaara, Živko Prodanović, Philip K. Dick, Hojiakbar Shaikhov, Yashim Abdullayev, Zdravko Valjak, Jack Williamson, Bela Đulai, Lee Killough
Sirius was a Croatian science fiction magazine. The foundation was proposed by Damir Mikuličić in 1976. In Sirius, the works of domestic authors, as well as translations of foreign SF authors, were published. It was published from 1976 to 1989.
Translation
Božidar Stančić, Zoran Milović, Ivan Paprika, Aleksandar Gvoić
Alfred Bester, Fritz Leiber, Clifford Simak, Miroslav Bagarić, Franci Cerar, Slobodan Ćurčić, Mar...
Sirius was a Croatian science fiction magazine. The foundation was proposed by Damir Mikuličić in 1976. In Sirius, the works of domestic authors, as well as translations of foreign SF authors, were published. It was published from 1976 to 1989.
Pete Adams, Charles Nightingale, Robert Sheckley, Branko Belan, Brian W. Aldiss, Arthur C. Clarke...
Sirius was a Croatian science fiction magazine. The foundation was proposed by Damir Mikuličić in 1976. In Sirius, the works of domestic authors, as well as translations of foreign SF authors, were published. It was published from 1976 to 1989.
Vjesnik, 1979.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Paperback.
3.72 €
British literature • Detective Stories • Thriller • Science Fiction
The first part of a trilogy about Takeshi Kovacs – a dark, violent, but intellectually provocative SF noir. The world of the future in Morgan's Digital Carbon is a cruel extrapolation of globalization, but at its core it is a classic noir crime novel.
The motif that Nesvadba has already used in a science fiction context, the FALSIFICATION OF AN ARCHAEOLOGICAL FIND, in "The Showdown with Doctor Dong" serves as a starting point for questioning the RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN REVOLUTION AND SCIENTIFIC TRUTH.
Epoha, 1965.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Hardcover with dust jacket.
4.25 €
American literature • Fantastic literature • Romance Novels • Thriller • Science Fiction
Canyons of Night (2011) by Jayne Castle (pseudonym Jayne Ann Krentz) is the third and final novel in the "Mirror" trilogy. Typical of Castle/Krentz: a strong heroine, a protective hero, psi-energy, mystery, and light eroticism.