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                                    Novi Sad,  Novi Sad  | 
                            
                                                                                        ISBN: Ostalo
                                                                                                                        Godina izdanja: .
                                                                                                                        Jezik: Engleski
                                                                                                                        Autor: Strani
                                                                                
                        lepo očuvano 
 
retko 
 
omot popravljen s unutrašnje strane sama knjiga bez mana 
 
THE SILENT PEOPLE SPEAK 
St. John, Robert 
 
Published by Doubleday & Company, Inc, Garden City, New York, 1948 
 
 
395 pages. Robert St. John (1902 - 2003) was an American author, broadcaster, and journalist. Intelligent personal impressions of the post-World War Two Yugoslavia and its capital Belgrade, as encompassed by Slovenia, Bosnia, Croatia, Dalmatia, Serbia, Montenegro, Greece, and Macedonia. Sequel to his bestselling The Land of the Silent People (1942).  
 
THE SILENT PEOPLE SPEAK 
by Robert St. John 
 
ROBERT ST. JOHN, who told about the war-torn Balkans in From the Land of Silent People, went back last year to that nervous double spot, penetrated the iron curtain, and came back with the exciting story, The Silent People Speak. 
 
In Belgrade, St. John found the job of UNRRA inspiring, the attitude of our State Department disappointing, and the work of foreign correspondents maddeningly frustrating. The city itself was much the same as when the German bombs were slaughtering the population, but the people were changed, both in appearance and outlook. 
 
But Belgrade is only part of Yugoslavia; the real story of the country lay with the people in the remote interior. With the help of Anita, an interpreter, St. John went to the back country of Serbia, Croatia, Slovenia, Macedonia, Bosnia, and Montenegro, to get the real story of Yugoslavia. Together they traveled through a section of the Balkans that no tourist ever visits. It was the winter of 1947, and they rode through the country in an open jeep or in unheated freight cars, sleeping in the open and in peasant cottages. 
 
Everywhere they met the people of the New Yugoslavia, people who looked years older than their real ages but who had survived successive waves of would-be conquerors. The people of the country remembered Robert St. John with affection because of his sympathetic story of the Balkans at war, and they spoke to him freely of their hopes for the future. 
 
THE SILENT PEOPLE SPEAK is an eloquent personal story, combining dramatic on-the-spot reportage with a sure feeling for the people and their problems. 
 
Tomorrow, has been tasting war and adventure since he went to France as a sixteen-year-old volunteer in 1918. A few years later he was almost killed in a gang war because, as the youngest editor-publisher in the Middle West, he had campaigned to drive Scarface Al Capone out of Cicero, Illinois. 
 
In World War II he was wounded when a Greek troop train he was on was strafed by a German plane. After twenty years as a newspaperman he became a radio commentator and public lecturer during the war. In his books, broadcasts, lectures, magazine articles, and newspaper stories, “people” have always been St. John’s theme. 
 
Contents 
Foreword 
Part One 
THIS IS ANYMAN’S LAND 
1. Lights and Shadows 
Part Two 
THIS IS BELGRADE 
2. The Chase of the Will-o’-the-Wisp Begins 
3. Who Said the Dead Don’t Cry? 
4. If There’s No Spark, Make One 
5. Angels on the Ceiling 
6. She Called Them “My People” 
7. Proving That You Can’t Always Tell 
8. Also Proving That You Can’t Always Tell 
9. “The Terror” 
10. Freedom—To Wander 
11. The Man Who Would Not Be King 
12. “Sympattcna” 
13. Good-by to All That 
Part Three 
THESE` ARE THE BOSNIANS 
14. Welcome to Sarajevo 
15. It All Depends on the Point of View 
16. The Dance of Death 
17. “A Sea of Ink and the Sky for My Paper” 
18. Wealthier Than a Sultan—Once 
19. Now They’re Just Bandits 
20. There Are No Plovics Any More 
21. Good Steel Doesn’t Break 
22. Atom Bombs Could Do No Worse 
23. Why? 
24. Counting the Dead Isn’t Easy 
25. Headline Writers Would Call It a “Food Riot” 
26. Then They Always Say “lzvtnite” 
27. To Poultrymen It’s a Disease 
28. The Old Man from Selani 
29. Red, Red Flows the Drina 
30. Always the Same Question 
31. Dwarfed Bodies, But Minds Alive 
32. “I Forgot to Tell You . . 
33. As Yellow As Glittering Gold 
34. The Miracle of Cajnice 
35. An Enemy of the Regime 
36. Forgive the Man Who Killed Your Mother? 
37. Little Rubber Balls 
38. Its Stones Were Flecked with Pink 
39. Education—Yugoslav Style 
40. This Was Her “Baby”! 
41. Some Still Live in the Hills 
Part Four 
THESE ARE THE DALMATIANS 
42. Niko the Apotekar 
43. More “Enemies of the Regime” 
44. Women Without Men 
45. But They Do Sing 
46. They Love Their Adriatic 
47. Labor—Before, During, After 
48. They Call “Hi, Serge!” 
49. One Hundred Thousand Guests for Dinner 
50. Sunday Is Sunday Is Sunday 
51. “Who Wants to Work?” 
Part Five 
THESE ARE THE MONTENEGRINS 
52. It Keeps You Young for Life 
53. Yugoslavia Under a Miscroscope 
54. “Never a Race of Mightier Mountaineers” 
55. Wanted—More Trucks, Fewer Diplomats 
Part Six 
THESE ARE THE CROATIANS 
56. Culture and Thin Bread 
57. Rankin, Pennsylvania 
58. Lidice with a Serbian Name 
59. “Bloto” Is Perfect 
60. Back to Wagging Tongues 
Part Seven 
THIS IS THE VOJVODINA 
61. Land of Plenty 
62. UNRRA at Work 
Part Eight 
THESE ARE THE SERBS 
63. All Is Not Leaves in a Teacup 
64. Milan, Milan, Milan 
65. More Beast Than Man 
66. Brother Against Brother 
67. Her First Corsage 
68. Believing Isn’t Seeing 
Part Nine THIS IS GREECE 
69. Luxury Interlude 
70. Millions for Cosmetics; Not a Cent for Reconstruction 
71. “Me and My Shadow” 
Part Ten 
THESE ARE THE MACEDONIANS 
72. “Srecan Put to Myself 
73. And the South Progresses Too 
Part Eleven 
THIS IS YUGOSLAVIA’S YOUTH 
74. “Three Meters Tonight!1 
Part Twelve 
THIS IS STRICTLY PERSONAL 
75. Lost Is Found 
Part Thirteen 
THIS IS BELGRADE AGAIN 
76. Capital Potpourri 
77. May Day Isn’t Only Baskets 
Part Fourteen 
THESE ARE THE SLOVENES 
78. More West Than East 
79. Without Portfolio 
80. “Sorta Like a Son” 
81. Faithful to a Phenomenon 
82. Gold Is Not Golo 
83. Impact Psychological 
84. Genteel Discontent 
85. Brooklyn in a Castle 
86. From Taxes to Sex 
87. Blood or Star Dust 
 
Jugoslavija Srbija Bosna Beograd Sarajevo Crna Gora Drugi svetski rat Srbi Hrvati 
u drugom svetskom ratu drugog svetskog rata istorija srba srpska srbije srpskog naroda jugoslavije balkana balkanska