Format: 13×20
ISBN: 978-953-7760-33-5
Pages: 160
Binding: paperback
Published: 2013.
10,00 € 6,00 €
Renowed Croatian poet and short story writer Dorta Jagić offers a series of highly original literary portraits of biblical heroines, drawing on material from the biblical narrative, but also from various other sources. The author gives her heroines imagined personal traits, poetic details of hair, face or gait, and more then an occasional hidden thought, connecting them boldly with contemporary world.
Format: 13×20
ISBN: 978-953-7760-33-5
Pages: 160
Binding: paperback
Published: 2013.
U svom subjektivno obojanom katalogu-galeriji ženskih likova iz Biblije Dorta Jagić ispisuje i objedinjuje niz književnih portreta biblijskih junakinja, crpeći građu u prvom redu iz biblijskog izvještaja, ali i iz znanstvene literature te osobnog upisivanja “između redova”. Izabranim junakinjama autorica daruje, uz obilje poezije, detaljno opisanu kosu, ponekad lice ili način hoda, poneku skrivenu misao.
U tom ženskom sabiranju, u kojemu se ističe raznolikost ženskih uloga, ravnopravno se susreću zvijezde kao Eva, Sara, Marija, Rebeka, ali i mnogo manje poznate a zanimljive žene kao poput Serve, Mikale, Atalije, Zareše. Sve su one za autoricu važne i bezvremene osobnosti koje izazivaju analizu, poniranje i identifikaciju, te neizbježne, ponekad humoristične a ponekad gorke, poveznice sa suvremenim kontekstom i problemima.
In this book of stories – with a subtitle: a novel – the author is playing with the science fiction genre, but hanging sheep-stealers is not a genre literature in the narrower sense of the term. Each of twenty texts of the book has a different narrative structure and is related to some problem of contemporary world, pushing chosen topics to possible or impossible extremes. So the obsession with eternal youth leads to the production of GMO people with a gene of snake, who change their skin every year but lose part of their memories in the process; the sudden loss of rare earth elements causes a major technological drawback; a solution for the recycling of plastic waste is achieved by the creation of copyrighted plastic-eating mutants; the idea of general participation in political power (“five minutes of power to everybody”) manifests itself as a travelling parliament-carousel with eight politically correct entrances; in the defrosted Arctic there is a war going on for the resources made attainable by the global warming etc.
All the stories are connected by the environment, a single imaginary world of not-too-distant future, but each has its separate setting and characters, with their interests, perceptions and – what is especially important – voices. The stories are often told through monologues and dialogues, from a somewhat distorted subjective perspective that constantly leaves open possibilities of another interpretation of things.
Novi roman Sanje Lovrenčić, „Crveni golubovi“, dvostruka je knjiga: prozni tekst, koji se oscilirajući na rubu fantastike bavi gorućim temama suvremenog svijeta, nadopunjen je „Pjesmaricom“, zbirkom poetskih fragmenata koje je autorica pisala kao skice za pojedine ulomke romana.
Radnja priče koja se iznosi na dva različita načina započinje dolaskom pripovjedačice na neimenovan otok. Naslijedivši kuću u gotovo napuštenom selu, ona dobiva razlog da se nakratko udalji od svakodnevne borbe za materijalnu egzistenciju. Krajolik u kojemu se našla nostalgično je idiličan: ruševne kamene kuće, divlji kapari, domaći sir, sunce i vjetar određuju taj mediteranski svijet. Sve sluti na to da će se ovdje, na distanci od ljudi, posla i rutine, otvoriti prostor za introspekciju, za suočavanje s vlastitom prošlošću, željama i nadama.
Zajedno s kućom, međutim, pripovjedačica je naslijedila i golubove koje je uzgajao njen preminuli rođak, Toni. Kad jednog jutra iznenada odluči osloboditi ptice iz golubinjaka, ni ne sluti da će joj se ti pismonoše ubrzo vratiti, i to u društvu prilično živopisnih gostiju. Golubovi naime na otok dovode neke Tonijeve stare prijatelje. Oni mu organiziraju trodnevne karmine te počinju pripovijedati fragmente zajedničke prošlosti: ostarjela kazališna družina koja je lutala Mediteranom, ili aktivni sudionici u previranjima za godina olova – junakinji se na temelju ponuđenih priča teško odlučiti. Na odlasku joj ta čudna skupina objašnjava pravu prirodu njenog novostečenog nasljedstva: uz kuću, ona nasljeđuje i obavezu da ispriča njihovu priču, priču koji nije dobro razumjela.
I tu mediteranskoj idili dolazi kraj: zamijenit će je istraživanje internacionalnog terorizma 1970-ih godina, revolt pred tadašnjim i sadašnjim srazom bogatstva i bijede, rastuća osjetljivost za devastaciju prirode, cyber-subverzije, utopijski virtualni prostori, traganje, strah i bijeg. Na fragmente priče svojih gostiju junakinja će odgovoriti vlastitima, koje će pak – kad se smiri vrtlog koji ju je ponio – gotovo nenamjerno ostaviti u nasljeđe novoj generaciji, za nove pokušaje.
Book #4714
In this short novel Michael Ende takes us for a journey across Europe, Asia, Africa, all the way to Hindukush. The story’s protagonist, Cyril Abercomby is an English aristocrat and the son of a 19th century diplomat. In his childhood he follows his father on diplomatic missions and when the father dies, Cyril inherits the family fortune and continues wandering across the globe in a pointless spleen. Although he had been enjoying the luxury of grand hotels and high society ever since his earliest childhood, Cyril is haunted for life by a feeling of non-belonging, of homelessness. But then one day, he finds his home – on a painting. Suddenly his voyages become purposeful: he must find the place depicted on the canvas, no matter the costs. This quest leads him to different atrocities and a final, suicidal, mission: neither dead, nor alive, Cyril finds his home in the space of his own imagination grafted upon a real geographical place. Michael Ende thus develops a dark, but lyrical story on alienation, the power of imagination and the workings of art. His text has been illustrated by the painter Dominik Vuković who visually represented the dark contours of this story that revolves around a painting.
Book #3363
