Radovan Nastić

Through his book  ...i napravim se da je sve u redu [and I pretend everything is fine] Nastić became the first author to publish a story about Merlinka, a famous tranvestite whose murder in 2003 caught national news headlines across Serbia and Montenegro.

In 2007, at the group exhibition 30 X 30 in the Cultural Center of Zrenjanin Nastić, presented the Serbian National Flag, an artwork composed of golden painkillers with the frame and background filled with used sedative boxes.

It is updated edition and with an English translation,[4] which brings, as the title suggests, a Belgrade love story that follows the whirlwind of emotions, memories and doubts of the main character.

He was looking for the meaning of life and finding out answers in classic films, musical hits, with pills and passionate encounters with his beloved Rachel.

Instead of an afterword, the work also contains an emotional text about the artist Sasa Markovic - Mikrob (1959 - 2010), with whom the author was friends and who wrote a review for the first edition.

Teofil Pančić has commented about the novels Bensedin and … and I pretend everything is fine: Nastić is always "strong" - the reader can agree with him or not - when he publicly casts out personal demons (and I don't know anyone who does it in that way: non-calculative and rudely as he does), but it's not for throwing away even when write freely he sees and hears around him, things which irritates him or in any other way inspires him to comment, and this one varies from not very impressive post-adolescent angst and infantile defiantly "rightist" to really great observations that many conceited "society analysts" would sell the soul, only if they had it.

[7]Ksenija Prodanović, reviewing The Day Mijatović Hit the Crossbar in Nedeljnik, wrote: Those who listened to B92 radio in the 1990s remember Radovan Nastić thanks to the show" Sports Rhythm of the Heart "and the stories he published in " Beorama ".

That is why I am glad that the Belgrade Laguna published his new novel "The day when Mijatović hit the crossbar" because now the wider audience will have the opportunity to meet an ambivalent Caffetin lover.

[8]Dušan Nedeljković, reviewing ..Mijatović.. for Danas, wrote: By publishing this novel, Radovan became the founder of a movement known for qualifying its members as "favorite losers".

Perpetually on the best part of society's margins, a man of very strong libido meets drag queens, gays, Sheki Turkovic and other small, and in fact great heroes of the planet," Cavic said, while Saponja noted that "the characters on the Hollywood fringe and situations from everyday life that Radovan describes are a real treasure for the reader and teleport them to a world where there is no place for faking it.