pregleda

Zlata`s Diary: A Child`s Life in Wartime Sarajevo


Cena:
799 din
Stanje: Polovan bez oštećenja
Garancija: Ne
Isporuka: Pošta
Post Express
Lično preuzimanje
Plaćanje: Tekući račun (pre slanja)
PostNet (pre slanja)
Pouzećem
Lično
Grad: Smederevska Palanka,
Smederevska Palanka
Prodavac

bondolica (4027)

PREMIUM član
Član je postao Premium jer:
- ima 100 jedinstvenih pozitivnih ocena od kupaca,
- tokom perioda od 6 meseci uplati minimum 20.000 dinara na svoj Limundo račun.

99,82% pozitivnih ocena

Pozitivne: 13069

  Pošalji poruku

Svi predmeti člana


Kupindo zaštita

Godina izdanja: Ostalo
ISBN: Ostalo
Autor: Domaći
Jezik: Engleski

In a voice both innocent and wise, touchingly reminiscent of Anne Frank`s, Zlata Filipovic`s diary has awoken the conscience of the world. Now thirteen years old, Zlata began her diary just before her eleventh birthday, when there was peace in Sarajevo and her life was that of a bright, intelligent, carefree young girl. Her early entries describe her friends, her new skis, her family, her grades at school, her interest in joining the Madonna Fan Club. And then, on television, she sees the bombs falling on Dubrovnik. Though repelled by the sight, Zlata cannot conceive of the same thing happening in Sarajevo. When it does, the whole tone of her diary changes.
Early on, she starts an entry to `Dear Mimmy` (named after her dead goldfish): `SLAUGHTERHOUSE! MASSACRE! HORROR! CRIMES! BLOOD! SCREAMS! DESPAIR!` We see the world of a child increasingly circumscribed by the violence outside. Zlata is confined to her family`s apartment, spending the nights, as the shells rain down mercilessly, in a neighbor`s cellar. And the danger outside steadily invades her life. No more school. Living without water and electricity. Food in short supply. The onslaught destroys the pieces she loves, kills or injures her friends, visibly ages her parents. In one entry Zlata cries out, `War has nothing to do with humanity. War is something inhuman.` In another, she thinks about killing herself. Yet, with indomitable courage and a clarity of mind well beyond her years, Zlata preserves what she can of her former existence, continuing to study piano, to find books to read, to celebrate special occasions - recording it all in the pages of this extraordinary diary.

za kupovinu tri ili više predmeta dostava je besplatna (PREPORUČENA TISKOVINA)
pogledajte i ponudu prodavca Spengler a ako tamo nađete nešto za vas, slanje i plaćanje će vam biti objedinjeni, takođe je besplatna dostava za 3 ili više predmeta.

Predmet: 75517685
In a voice both innocent and wise, touchingly reminiscent of Anne Frank`s, Zlata Filipovic`s diary has awoken the conscience of the world. Now thirteen years old, Zlata began her diary just before her eleventh birthday, when there was peace in Sarajevo and her life was that of a bright, intelligent, carefree young girl. Her early entries describe her friends, her new skis, her family, her grades at school, her interest in joining the Madonna Fan Club. And then, on television, she sees the bombs falling on Dubrovnik. Though repelled by the sight, Zlata cannot conceive of the same thing happening in Sarajevo. When it does, the whole tone of her diary changes.
Early on, she starts an entry to `Dear Mimmy` (named after her dead goldfish): `SLAUGHTERHOUSE! MASSACRE! HORROR! CRIMES! BLOOD! SCREAMS! DESPAIR!` We see the world of a child increasingly circumscribed by the violence outside. Zlata is confined to her family`s apartment, spending the nights, as the shells rain down mercilessly, in a neighbor`s cellar. And the danger outside steadily invades her life. No more school. Living without water and electricity. Food in short supply. The onslaught destroys the pieces she loves, kills or injures her friends, visibly ages her parents. In one entry Zlata cries out, `War has nothing to do with humanity. War is something inhuman.` In another, she thinks about killing herself. Yet, with indomitable courage and a clarity of mind well beyond her years, Zlata preserves what she can of her former existence, continuing to study piano, to find books to read, to celebrate special occasions - recording it all in the pages of this extraordinary diary.
75517685 Zlata`s Diary: A Child`s Life in Wartime Sarajevo

LimundoGrad koristi kolačiće u statističke i marketinške svrhe. Nastavkom korišćenja sajta smatramo da ste pristali na upotrebu kolačića. Više informacija.