BOOK 1
Moja zeleno-rdeča pot
“I was searching for direction.”
Moja zeleno-rdeča pot is the first book in the LEGIONAR trilogy. More than an account of entering the French Foreign Legion, it follows a young man finding himself inside order, effort, fear, belonging and a world that allows no shortcuts. From the first steps in uniform, through training, field exercises, Africa, Corsica and tests of leadership, what takes shape is a life in which nothing is taken for granted and everything has its price.
It is a story of physical endurance, inner transformation and the cost of choosing to continue. Told without embellishment or noise, with the precision of someone who had to live it himself – step by step, task by task, price by price.
BOOK 2
Mera
“It was no longer a question of whether I could endure.”
Mera is the second book in the LEGIONAR trilogy. The first trials have passed; what remains is judgement under pressure, responsibility, and the consequences of decisions. Through war, training, operational tasks and proximity to danger, a more mature phase of the soldier comes into view: no longer defined by how much he can withstand, but by how he carries knowledge, self-command and the weight of his actions.
Maturity is tested under pressure: in the measure of action, pace and risk, and in the need to remain precise even when there are no witnesses, no applause and no excuses left.
BOOK 3
Črta
“I knew how to stay. Now I had to learn how to leave.”
Črta is the third book in the LEGIONAR trilogy. By this point, endurance and responsibility under pressure are no longer enough. Everything he knows and everything he has become must now be weighed against home, an inner measure and the consequences that follow. From Djibouti and French Guiana to final missions, family and the cracks within the system, the book opens onto a period in which duty does not disappear, but it is no longer the only standard.
At its core, Črta is about loyalty, responsibility and a line drawn not from anger, but from maturity – when the task has been carried through to the end, and leaving becomes the act of preserving what must not be lost.