David AlbahariW
David Albahari

David Albahari is a Sefardi Serbian writer from Kosovo, residing in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. Albahari writes mainly novels and short stories. He is also an established translator from English into Serbian. He is a member of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts and a University of Belgrade graduate.

Voja AntonićW
Voja Antonić

Vojislav "Voja" Antonić is a Serbian inventor, journalist and writer. He was also a magazine editor and contributed to a number of radio shows but he is best known for creating a build-it-yourself home computer Galaksija and originating a related "Build your own computer Galaksija" initiative with Dejan Ristanović. This initiative encouraged and enlightened thousands of computer enthusiasts during the 1980s in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. Mr. Antonić donated many of his personally creations to the public domain, whenever they related to the common people or a fellow engineer.

Bogoboj AtanackovićW
Bogoboj Atanacković

Bogoboj Atanacković was a Serbian writer. Atanacković who, encouraged by the ideas of romanticism, changed his name Timotej into Bogoboj for artistic reasons at the age of eighteen.

Vladislav BajacW
Vladislav Bajac

Vladislav Bajac is Serbian writer, poet, journalist and publisher.

Svetislav BasaraW
Svetislav Basara

Svetislav Basara is a Serbian writer and columnist.

Zoran ĆirićW
Zoran Ćirić

Zoran Ćirić is a writer from Niš, Serbia. He writes poetry and prose.

Branimir ĆosićW
Branimir Ćosić

Branimir Ćosić was a Serbian writer and journalist born in the village of Štitar and died in Belgrade at 31 from tuberculosis. He studied philosophy and law in Belgrade, Lausanne and Paris. Ćosić published his texts in Politika (1924), Reči i slika (1926) and Pravda (1930-1934). His parents were teachers in schools in nearby villages.

Filip DavidW
Filip David

Filip David is a Serbian writer and screenwriter, best known for penning essays, dramas, short stories and novels. In 2015, he won the NIN Award for best Serbian novel of the year 2014 for his novel "Kuća sećanja i zaborava".

Dragomir DujmovW
Dragomir Dujmov

Dragomir Dujmov is a Serbian poet, novelist and short story writer from Hungary.

Aleksandar GatalicaW
Aleksandar Gatalica

Aleksandar Gatalica is a Serbian writer, critic and translator, best known for his novel The Great War, for which he won the NIN Award for best Serbian novel of the year. His works has been translated in more than ten languages.

Milovan GlišićW
Milovan Glišić

Milovan Glišić was a Serbian writer, dramatist, translator, and literary theorist. He is sometimes referred to as the Serbian Gogol.

Ivan IvanićW
Ivan Ivanić

Ivan Ivanić was a Serbian diplomat of the Kingdom of Serbia and author of numerous ethnographical works about Serbia and the Balkans. He also wrote travel literature about the region of Old Serbia.

Đura JakšićW
Đura Jakšić

Georgije "Đura" Jakšić was a Serbian poet, painter, writer, dramatist and bohemian.

Vojislav V. JovanovićW
Vojislav V. Jovanović

Vojislav V. Jovanović was a Serbian novelist and writer of short stories, prose and poems.

Boban KneževićW
Boban Knežević

Boban Knežević is a Serbian science fiction and fantasy writer, comic book writer, editor and publisher.

Zlatoje MartinovW
Zlatoje Martinov

Zlatoje Martinov is a Serbian publicist and writer.

Aleksandar NovakovićW
Aleksandar Novaković

Aleksandar Novaković is a Serbian writer and playwright.

Milorad PavićW
Milorad Pavić

Milorad Pavić was a Serbian novelist, poet, short story writer, and literary historian. Born in Belgrade in 1929, he published a number of poems, short stories and novels during his lifetime, the most famous of which was the Dictionary of the Khazars (1984). Upon its release, it was hailed as "the first novel of the 21st century." Pavić's works have been translated into more than thirty languages. He was vastly popular in Europe and in South America, and was deemed "one of the most intriguing writers from the beginning of the 21st century." He won numerous prizes in Serbia and in the former Yugoslavia, and was mentioned several times as a potential candidate for the Nobel Prize in Literature. He died in Belgrade in 2009.

Goran PetrovićW
Goran Petrović

Goran Petrović is a Serbian writer.

Zoran Petrović (writer)W
Zoran Petrović (writer)

Zoran Petrović was a Serbian poet, novelist, and screenwriter.

Dušan PrelevićW
Dušan Prelević

Dušan Prelević "Prele" was a Serbian singer, journalist, and writer.

Zoran SpasojevićW
Zoran Spasojević

Zoran Spasojević, is a Serbian writer.

Srđan SrdićW
Srđan Srdić

Srđan Srdić is a Serbian novelist, short-story writer, essayist, editor, publisher and creative reading/writing teacher. He has published four novels, two short story collections and a book of essays, and has contributed as a writer and/or editor to several short story collections and literary magazines.

Zoran StefanovićW
Zoran Stefanović

Zoran Stefanović is an award-winning Serbian author, publisher and cultural activist, best known as the founder of several cultural networks, including Project Rastko. His works were published and produced in Europe and US.

Radosav StojanovićW
Radosav Stojanović

Radosav Stojanović is a Serbian writer, journalist and lexicographer.

Miroljub TodorovićW
Miroljub Todorović

Miroljub Todorović is a Serbian poet and artist. He is the founder and theoretician of Signalism, an international avant-garde literary and artistic movement. He is also editor-in-chief of the International review "Signal".

Janko Veselinović (writer)W
Janko Veselinović (writer)

Janko "Jan" Veselinović was a Serbian writer, influenced by Milovan Glišić, Milan Đ. Milićević, Đura Jakšić, and Rusyn writer Marija A. Markovič, who went under the assumed name of Marko Vovčuk.

Zoran Živković (writer)W
Zoran Živković (writer)

Zoran Živković is a Serbian writer, university professor, essayist, researcher, publisher and translator. Žiković's works have been translated to 20 languages and he was awarded World Fantasy Award.