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As seguintes obras literárias, referências ou autores foram mencionados ou apareceram na série até agora. Por favor veja os seus artigos para detalhes; esta página é de listagem. Note: Os links de algumas obras literárias e de alguns autores redirecionam para a wikipedia em inglês, outras para a wikipedia em português.

Livros e Literatura

After All These Years

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Alice's Adventures in Wonderland

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Are You There, God? It's Me, Margaret

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Bad Twin

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Bible

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A Brief History of Time

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The Brothers Karamazov

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Carrie

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Dirty Work

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The Epic of Gilgamesh

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Harry Potter

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Heart of Darkness

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Hindsight

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I Ching

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Island

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Julius Caesar

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Lancelot

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Laughter in the Dark

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Lord of the Flies

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The Mysterious Island

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Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge

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The Odyssey

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Of Mice and Men

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Our Mutual Friend

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The Outsiders

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Rainbow Six

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Stranger in a Strange Land

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A Tale of Two Cities

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The Third Policeman

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To Kill a Mockingbird

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The Turn of the Screw

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Watership Down

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The Wizard of Oz

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A Wrinkle in Time

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Referenced authors

Hemingway, Ernest vs. Dostoevsky, Fyodor

  • Locke and Ben both mention him in comparison to Dostoevsky (who wrote The Brothers Karamazov, see above).
  • There are no real life references to Hemingway being jealous of Dostoevsky's work or feeling in his shadow. This may have been made up for the show for dramatic effect.

King, Stephen

  • Ben sarcastically tells Locke that he prefers King when given a copy of The Brothers Karamazov to read while in confinement.
  • Damon Lindelof has said that his novels (especially the Stand) have been a major influence on Lost. Numerous other ties exist, such as a mutual admiration between the writers.
  • The Others' book club is reading and discussing Carrie, which he wrote (see above). ("A Tale of Two Cities")

Li Bai

  • An early Tang Dynasty (618-907) poem by Chinese poet Li Bai, "Third Eye Ascended in Dreams" is seen as calligraphy in flashbacks of Jin and Sun's home.
  • See link for a complete English translation.
  • The content itself is surreal, being about a man who journeys far in a dream as though in a vivid parallel dimension, only to be abruptly awoken to the mundaneness and bitterness of reality. This is a paradox uncovering that dreams can be better at revealing the truth than reality.

Musset, Alfred de

  • Locke attempts to recreate his brief sighting of the blast door map on a page from a 1939 book of poems by Alfred de Musset, called Sur les Débuts de Melles Rachel et Pauline (On the Beginnings of Miss Rachel and Miss Pauline).

Roman Authors Quoted on the Blast Door Map

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