The novel “VREMENA GODA” is written in an eclectic manner in the spirit of refined English postmodernism of James Joyce, and with an elegantly conceptual style characteristic of novelist John Fowles.
You could even say it has absorbed all the riches of the genre that the psychologist and seeker of God Dostoevsky and the brilliant mystifying novelist Franz Kafka cultivated so skillfully. And most importantly, the book is written with a soul and from the heart—so reading it is incredibly pleasant and emotionally beneficial.
It is a novel about “life-flourishing”—the inner force and reason that live in a person and help one be happy until the very end of days. In the book, in an astonishing way, a young girl and a paralyzed old woman are spiritually connected—though they are not destined to feel old age. The first is because of an incurable disease that kills people at a young age; the second—for the same reason, but in old age. And both live as if they were, one after the other, exchanging souls.