Further Reading
- Butler, Thomas. "Ivo Andrić: a 'Yugoslav' Writer." Cross Currents: A Yearbook of Central European Culture, 1991, pp. 117-21. (Investigates the changing dialect of Andrić's work and whether the shift was politically motivated.)
- Butler, Thomas. “Between East and West. Three Bosnian Writer-Rebels: Kočić, Andrić, Selimović.” Cross Currents: A Yearbook of Central European Culture 3 (1984): 339-57. (Traces Bosnia's heroic epic oral tradition through its transformation after the Austrian Occupation of 1878 to the early twentieth-century writers who played a role in the region's struggle for change.)
- Christowe, Stoyan. "Guilt, Sin, Above All, Fear." New York Times Book Review (October 28, 1962): 4. (Provides a mixed review of The Vizier's Elephant and Devil's Yard.)
- Coote, Mary P. “Narrative and Narrative Structure in Ivo Andrić's Devil's Yard.” Slavic and East European Journal 21 (1977): 56-63. (Examines the role of story-telling and legends in Devil's Yard.)
- Costantini, Leonello. “Ivo Andrić in the Centenary of His Birth.” Italian Books and Periodicals: Cultural and Bibliographic Review 36, nos. 1-2 (January-December 1993): 13-18. (Provides a retrospective of major themes in Andrić's works.)
- Ginsburg, Michael. "Voice from a Bosnian Inferno." Saturday Review 45, no. 47 (November 24, 1962): 31-2. (Praises the dignity and diverse nature of the stories collected in The Vizier's Elephant and Devil's Yard.)
- Juričić, Želimir. "All of Alija's Women: Andrić's Realization of 'Ex Ponto' Visions." East European Literature, 1982, pp. 23-32. (Maintains that "a number of structural and contextual similarities suggest that Ex Ponto and 'The Journey of Derzelez Alija' form a natural link in Andrić's development.")
- Talmor, Sascha. “The Bridge on the Drina.” History of European Ideas 21, no. 2 (March 1995): 247-60. (Explains the history behind the bridge in Andrić's novel.)
- Villari, Lucio. “On the Frontier between Two Europes.” Italian Books and Periodicals: Cultural and Bibliographic Review 36, nos. 1-2 (January-December 1993): 19-21. (Discusses Andrić's reaction in his writing to the political and social turbulence of the Balkans.)
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