After the war, Ćipiko became one of the most ardent proponent of Jovan Skerlić's unitarian ideas along with other Serbian writers from Croatia, Dalmatia, Montenegro, and Bosnia and Herzegovina, such as Mirko Korolija, Niko Pucić, Svetozar Ćorović and Aleksa Šantić.
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The same kind of lyrical prose was produced by the eight years younger Isidora Sekulić in Bure (Gusts).
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Ćipiko graduated from a forestry school in 1890 and worked as a forestry officer in Brač, Makarska, Hvar and Kotor until 1909.
Ivo Karlović | Ivo Andrić | Ivo Watts-Russell | Ivo Banac | Ivo Puhonny | Ivo Perišin | Ivo Josipović | Ivo Bligh | Ivo Vinco | Ivo Vojnović | Ivo Perović | Ivo of Kermartin | Ivo Niehe | Ivo Linna | Ivo Heuberger | Ivo Babuška | Tommy Ivo | Sandro Ivo Bartoli | Ivo Urbančič | Ivo Stourton | Ivo Siromahov | Ivo Sanader | Ivo Pilar | Ivo Pauwels (author) | Ivo Pauwels | Ivo Opstelten | Ivo Neame | Ivo Malec | Ivo Lapenna | Ivo Kerdić |
These Serbian prose writers showed many traits in common with the Russians, particularly with Dostoyevsky (Borisav Stanković), and to a certain extent also with Maxim Gorky (Ivo Čipiko and Petar Kočić).
His contemporaries were Veljko M. Milićević, Ivo Ćipiko, Borisav Stanković, Janko Veselinović, Petar Kočić, Simo Matavulj, Radoje Domanović, Milorad J. Mitrović (poet), Stevan Sremac, Laza Kostić and others.