The action of the game Knapi slikarji is triggered when a group of miners decides to get additional education. They hire an art history teacher who tries to introduce them to the world of art. They quickly realize that theoretical discussion is not the most suitable for them, so they devote themselves to practice - drawing. In a few years they become...
After the book Harry Potter and the Cursed Child has already hit Slovenian bookshelves, we have already learned when the eighth book sequel about the famous wizard will be published in Slovenian. The translation of the book Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, which will bear the title Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, will be published by the beginning of the Slovenian Book Fair.
The book Harry Potter and the Cursed Child is here! After the release of the original on July 31, 2016, we will see the Slovenian translation of Harry Potter and the Cursed Child on November 23, 2016. The credit for the fact that we will also be able to read the eighth part of the book about the popular wizard in Slovenian goes again to Jakob J. Kenda and Mladinski knjiga, which has been the publisher of books by writer JK Rowling since 2007. You can get your copy at the Slovenian Book Fair 2016, which will take place in Cankarjev dom between November 23 and 27, 2016 and in all bookstores across Slovenia.
250 of the best pieces of advice from popular music of the last fifty years are collected in a book with the cute title: Don't eat yellow snow.
All loyal visitors of the Open Kitchen, who smell the delicious morsels from the popular Ljubljana food market even in the colder months, can from now on prepare the gastronomic discoveries of the Open Kitchen themselves in the shelter of our home. Namely, a collection of recipes of the most celebrated dishes from Pogačarjev trg has been published.
The book "The Killer Detail: Defining Moments in Fashion" consists of 120 photographs of influential personalities who in one way or another influenced fashion with their dressing and appearance.
Much has been said and written about the greatest boxer of all time, Muhammad Ali. But now finally comes the definitive biography of one of the most interesting sports personalities of the 20th century.
Widow Basquiat is a cult poetic biography of the infamous artist Jean-Michel Basquiat, which traces the lives of Suzanne and Jean-Michel in short sections. Suzanne's memoirs talk about their life together, which they spent intensively in the obscene eighties of the last century in the glitz and misery of New York.
Child's play, a wonderful escape into a fantasy world that goes on and on, is one of the most beautiful parts of innocent childhood. Children have the ability to empathize with spheres that we have already forgotten and conjure up for us a forgotten world that hovers on the thin line between the ideal and the real. In the book "Toy Stories: Photos of Children from Around the World and Their Favorite Things", the author Gabriele Galimberti shows this extremely colorful world.
On the Stari trg in Ljubljana, the Institute for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing Ljubljana (ZGN Ljubljana) has opened the book store Zebra Goes to the Moon. The date of the opening (October 28, 2016) is no coincidence, as on this day exactly 116 years have passed since the founding of ZGN Ljubljana. The shop in the heart of the old town will be dedicated to raising awareness of the skills, talents and knowledge of children and young people with special needs in the areas of hearing, speech and communication. The purpose of the bookstore-store is an ethical commitment and moral value of spreading awareness of difference and reciprocity.
Some are enjoying their annual leave, while others are counting down the days until theirs begins. And since this time is intended for rest and relaxation, it is right to read a few more books at that time, for which there was no time during the year.
Among the flood of diverse Instagram profiles on the popular social network, we also find a profile that is dedicated to singing the praises of reading books and convincing us that we can read practically everywhere.