Andrej Nikolaidis Orden de los libros
Andrej Nikolaidis es reconocido como uno de los intelectuales más influyentes de la generación joven en la región, conocido por su activismo contra la guerra y su defensa de los derechos de las minorías. Su obra explora frecuentemente la libertad de expresión, que considera la piedra angular de toda libertad. Nikolaidis defiende audazmente a las víctimas de tortura policial, generando debate público con sus opiniones contundentes. A través de sus escritos y su compromiso público, examina complejas cuestiones sociales y políticas, ofreciendo una perspectiva que no teme abordar verdades difíciles.





- 2024
- 2019
The Olcinium Trilogy
- 316 páginas
- 12 horas de lectura
A compelling trilogy of short thrillers which centre around the ancient Mediterranean port of Ulcinj: site of treachery and mystery over the centuries, mixed in with Communist plots and secret service killings.
- 2015
Till Kingdom Come
- 160 páginas
- 6 horas de lectura
One man's search for his true identity through an investigation of his parent's past which leads him to discover truths about the former Yugoslav secret services. Through his own unique and now recognizable style, Nikolaidis takes us into a world of criminal intrigue and a dissection of our humble human existence. Powerful, rich in philosophy.
- 2013
Son
- 140 páginas
- 5 horas de lectura
The Son follows one night in the life of a hero with no name, a writer whose life is falling apart. Stepping into the warm, Mediterranean night, in the southern Mediterranean city of Ulcinj, he encounters fanatics, thieves and prostitutes and learns the secret of his father's one obsession.
- 2012
The Coming
- 110 páginas
- 4 horas de lectura
In a small town on the Adriatic coast, a local detective is content to sacrifice truth for the sake of telling his clients the stories they want to hear. At first, The Coming reads as a traditional detective novel, but suddenly changes form with the advent of snow in midsummer. When the town library burns down under mysterious circumstances, the detective s long-lost son begins to get involved in the investigations from afar. He takes the reader on excursions into history and recounts the life of Fra Dolcino, a medieval heretic who announced the return of the Messiah and also illuminates the life and work of Sabbatai Zevi, a Renaissance cabalist, who maintained that he himself was the Messiah. We learn that Sabbatai Zevi died in Ulcinj and left behind a manuscript, The Book of Return, which remains hidden. The unsolved mysteries of both past and present, as well as environmental anomalies, serve to create the sense of an impending apocalypse, giving way in the final chapter to a post-apocalyptic reality.