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Zagreb Noir

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
“Zagreb’s noirish underbelly comes from a new nation familiar with both war and war crimes. Mr. Sršen’s handpicked selections are anything but ordinary.” —New York Journal of Books
 
Eastern European history is filled with noir-ish and harrowing tales, and Zagreb, the capital city of Croatia, certainly has its fill. Layers of trauma from its war years, soccer hooliganism, and a shadowy Balkan underground all contribute to the city’s transient and inconstant character. Editor Ivan Sršen has curated a diverse, powerful, and dramatic group of stories that offer tremendous insight into the perspectives of contemporary Croatians.
 
Zagreb Noir features translated stories by: Ivan Vidić, Josip Novakovich, Andrea Žigić-Dolenec, Robert Perišić, Mima Simić, Pero Kvesić, Nada Gašić, Zoran Pilić, Ružica Gašperov, Darko Milošić, Nora Verde, Ivan Sršen, Neven Ušumović, and Darko Macan.
 
“Zagreb, Croatia—its culture and its touchstones—will be terra incognita for many U.S. readers . . . Notable is Nora Verde’s ‘She-Warrior,’ in which a young woman’s carefully planned anarchist activities are smacked down by a triple helping of reality.” —Publishers Weekly
 
“The stories shed light on a sickness that stirs within society’s boundaries. Readers will easily glean that this sickness is not exclusive to Zagreb. Sršen reveals the ugly truth about human nature that burrows under the surface in war-torn countries.” —The Examiner (San Francisco)
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 28, 2015
      Zagreb, Croatia—its culture and its touchstones—will be terra incognita for many U.S. readers, along with the 14 contributors to this average Akashic noir anthology. Darko Macan gets the volume off to a promising start with “A Girl in the Garage,” in which a rumor started by a drunken tenant provides another resident with unexpected, and unsettling, adventures. In Mima Simic’s “Horse Killer,” a young woman exacts terrible, but fitting, revenge on a man whose brutality took the lives of her friends. Several stories revolve around the conflict between Serbs and Croats during the Croatian War of Independence (1991–1995). One of them, Pero Kvesic’s “Night Vision,” a tale of courage and hope, contains the memorable line “War is a bad thing because it creates many more wicked people than it destroys.” Also notable is Nora Verde’s “She-Warrior,” in which a young woman’s carefully planned anarchist activities are smacked down by a triple helping of reality, but too many other selections are routine efforts.

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