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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.
After All These Years
de Susan Isaacs
Alice no País das Maravilhas
de Lewis Carroll
- Locke menciona esse romance quando está falando com Jack sobre Coelho Branco no episódio "White Rabbit"(Coelho Branco) na 1ª Temporada.
- O título desse episódio, "White Rabbit", é uma referência ao personagem do mesmo nome.
Are You There God? It's Me, Margaret
de Judy Blume
- Sawyer é visto lendo esse livro no episódio "The Whole Truth". Ele diz que é "Previsível. Longe de sexo o suficiente", quando Sun se aproxima dele.
Bad Twin
de "Gary Troup"
- Hurley está lendo o manuscrito de Bad Twin no episódio "The Long Con".
- Sawyer está lendo o mesmo manuscrito no episódio "Two for the Road".
A Bíblia
- Mr. Eko dá a Locke um livro que ele encontrou na estação O Cajado. Quando Locke abre o livro, ele percebe que é a Bíblia e também descobre que a parte do centro do livro foi retirada. Dentro dessa abertura está uma parte perdida do [[Filme de Orientação do Cisne]
- Uma Bíblia também é mostrada na estante de livros do escritóio de Jack no episódio "A Tale of Two Cities".
The Brothers Karamazov
de Fyodor Dostoevsky
- Locke da esse livro a Ben (que estava até então alegando ser Henry Gale) para ler no episódio "Maternity Leave", no que Ben responde, "Você não tem nada de Stephen King?"
Carrie
de Stephen King
- É o livro que Juliet e os outros membros do clube do livro estavam lendo no episódio "A Tale of Two Cities".
Dirty Work
de Stuart Woods
- Esse livro eh visto na estante de livros da escotilha durante o episódio "Orientation".
- Uma cópia desse livro também é mostrada na estante de livros do escitório de Jack no episódio "A Tale of Two Cities".
The Epic of Gilgamesh
- As palavras cruzadas que Locke está resolvendo no episódio "Collision" contém uma pista de referência ao "The Epic of Gilgamesh".
Harry Potter
- Enquanto nenhum livro específico de J.K. Rowling é mencionado, Hurley menciona Harry quando comenta como Sawyer está parecendo usando seus novos óculos no episódio "Deus Ex Machina".
Heart of Darkness
de Joseph Conrad
- No episódio "Numbers", Charlie diz a Hurley, "Num minuto você é o despreocupado, boa vida Hurley, e no próximo você é o maldito Coronel Kurtz!".
- Coronel Kurtz é um personagem do filme Apocalypse Now, de 1979 o qual é baseado em Heart of Darkness.
Ernest Hemingway
Hindsight
de Peter Wright
David Hume
- Um filósofo escocês do século 18, influenciado por John Locke.
- É o mesmo nome de Desmond (Desmond David Hume).
I Ching
- Ideogramas de "I Ching" aparecem nos logos da Dharma.
Estante de Livros de Jack
- Os seguintes livros foram identificados na estante de livros de Jack mostrada no episódio "A Tale of Two Cities".
- No topo da estante (esquerda pra direita)
1. Three Ring Binder (Preto – fino)
2. Three Ring Binder (Preto – fino)
3. Three Ring Binder (Branco – grosso – escrito em amarelo “…OGICAL”?)
4. Three Ring Binder (Branco – fino)
5. Three Ring Binder (Cinza – grosso)
6. ____’s Leis Comerciais
7. Enciclopédia Compton Vol. 23
8. Procedimentos Clínicos
9. Edição de Platina de Harrison
- 1ª PRATELEIRA (esquerda pra direita)
1.
2.
3.
4.
5. Administração de sistemas de informação em prática--Barbara C. McNurlin, Ralph H. Sprague
6. Fogo na Mente: Fé e a procura por Ordem--George Johnson
7. Cavalo Negro--Tami Hoag
8.
9. Astrologia de Parker--Julia Parker e Derek Parker
10.____ Anuário dos Estudantes
11. Livro do Ano 1976
12.
13.
14. Pale Horse Coming--Stephen Hunter
15. As horas da noite são Minhas Horas--Mary Higgins Clark
16. A Geração Liderante--Tom Brokaw
17.
18. Lidando com perda de emprego: Como Indivíduis, Organizaçãoes e Comunidades Respondem ao desemprego (Problemas em Organização e Administração)--Carrie R. Leana e Daniel C. Feldman
19.
20. Nadar Nú--Carl Hiaasen
21. Redenção (romance)--Leon Uris
- 2ª PRATELEIRA (esquerda para direita)
1.
2. Two Dollar Bill--Stuart Woods
3. Domes of Fire--David Eddings
4. The Power of Beauty--Nancy Friday
5. Valhalla Rising--Clive Cussler
6. No Place Like Home--Mary Higgins Clark
7.
8. Hearts in Atlantis--Stephen King[1]
9. Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban--J.K. Rowling
10. Fraser and Pare's Diagnosis of Diseases of the Chest (Vol.I)
11. Fraser and Pare's Diagnosis of Diseases of the Chest (Vol. II)
12. Fraser and Pare's Diagnosis of Diseases of the Chest (Vol. III)
13. Fraser and Pare's Diagnosis of Diseases of the Chest (Vol. IV)
(biking trophy)
14.
15.
16. Eleventh Hour--Catherine Coulter
17.
18.Last ______
- SHELF 3 (left to right)
1. The Spirit of Christmas
2.
3.
4. Funk & Wagnalls New Encyclopedia Vol 14
5. McNally's Folly--Vincent Lardo
6. Funk & Wagnalls (?)
7. Astrological Patterns
8. Reader's Digest Condensed Book (titles illegible)
9. Holy Bible
10.Dirty Work--Stuart Woods
11.
12.
13.Pulmonary Diseases and Disorders--Alfred P. Fishman
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.The Scottish Bride--Catherine Coulter
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
- SHELF 4 (left to right)
(golf clubs in front of several books)
1.
2.
3.
4. Scientific Genius--Dean Kenneth Simonton
5. A History of World Societies--John P. McKay, John Buckler, Bennett D. Hill, Patricia Buckley Ebrey
6.
7. International Book of ____ (?)
8. Reference book
9. Reference book
10. Reference book
11. Reference book
12. Reference book
13. Reference book
14. Reference book
15. Reference book
16. Reference book
17. Encyclopedia Americana (Vol. II)
18. Encyclopedia Americana (Vol. I)
- SHELF 5 (left to right)
1. Encyclopedia Americana (Vol. ?)
2. Encyclopedia Americana (Vol. 12)
3. Encyclopedia Americana (Vol.13)
4. America _______
5.
6.
7. The Bailey Chronicles--Catherine Cookson
8. Last Rights: Rescuing the End of Life from the Medical Establishment--Stephen Kiernan
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15. _____ Vol. 2
16. _____ Vol. 15
17. _____ Vol. 1
- SHELF 6 (left to right)
1.
2.
3.
Julius Caesar
- Sawyer says to Locke, "You too, Brutus?", in "Two for the Road" (Season Two). This is a reference to the famous quote, "Et tu, Brute?", which are Caesar's last words in Shakespeare's Julius Caesar. According to the chronicles, his last words were actually "Tu quoque, mi fili? ["You too, my son?"]" or even "Kaï sù, tèknon?", which is the same question, in Greek.
Juvenal
- Quotes from this Roman author are found on the Blast Door Map.
Lancelot
by Walker Percy
- Sawyer was reading this on the beach in "Maternity Leave" when Kate asked him for a gun.
- The title of this book references, in turn, the entire Arthurian canon.
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.
- 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 meaning that dreams can be better at revealing the truth than reality.
Locke, John
- John Locke was a 17th century English Enlightenment philosopher who wrote two treaties on government as well as other essays about man's role as a social being.
The Lord of the Flies
by William Golding
- This novel is mentioned by Sawyer during "...In Translation" (Season One).
- In "What Kate Did" (Season Two), Charlie mentions how the Tailies went "all Lord of the Flies."
- The Oceanic Airlines website has a link to the Stephen King novel Hearts in Atlantis, which is about a boy who receives a copy of The Lord of the Flies and becomes enthralled by it.
Marcus Annaeus Lucanus
- Quotes from this Roman author are found on the Blast Door Map.
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 (Of the Debuts of Rachel and Pauline).
The Mysterious Island
by Jules Verne
- In the novel, several people crash-land a balloon onto an island in the South Pacific (as the actual Henry Gale apparently did), where odd things happen.
- There is an orangutan called "Jupe" (short for "Jupiter") on the island. The Hanso Foundation's Joop is very likely a reference to this.
An Occurrence At Owl Creek Bridge
by Ambrose Bierce
- Locke is shown holding this book upside down, in the Swan, flipping through the pages as if he's trying to find loose papers between them.
The Odyssey
Epic Greek tale by Homer, sequel to The Iliad, with parallels to themes in Lost, particularly the story of Desmond and Penelope.
Our Mutual Friend
by Charles Dickens
- Desmond had planned for this to be last book he reads before he dies.
The Outsiders
by Susan E. Hinton
- In the flashback scene in the van during "Everybody Hates Hugo" (Season Two), Hurley's friend Johnny says to him, "Stay gold, Ponyboy." This is a reference to The Outsiders and this phrase being used in the book is, in turn, a reference to the Robert Frost poem "Nothing Gold Can Stay".
Plautus
- Quotes from this Roman author are found on the Blast Door Map.
Rainbow Six
by Tom Clancy
- This book is shown on the bookshelf in the Swan hatch during "Orientation" (Season Two).
Romeo and Juliet
- The character Juliet seems to be a member (or perhaps the leader) of one of two factions within the Others and to have once had a relationship with Ben, the leader of the other faction.
Rousseau, Jean-Jacques
- Influential 18th century Swiss French philosopher who wrote The Social Contract and introduced the idea of the "noble savage".
- Is likely the inspiration for Danielle Rousseau's name.
The Stand
by Stephen King
- Damon Lindelof has said that this novel was a major influence on Lost. Several characters in that book share certain similarities with those on the island.
A Tale of Two Cities
- This is the title of the first episode of Season Three.
- Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse revealed in the official podcast that the "two cities" refer to the two seperate societies of the crash survivors and the Others.
The Third Policeman
by Flann O'Brien
- This book is seen when Desmond is gathering his things as he prepares to run from the Swan after Jack damages the computer.
The Turn of the Screw
by Henry James
- In the Swan, Desmond tells Jack and Locke that the DHARMA Initiative orientation film is on the shelf behind this book.
- In the book Bad Twin, Manny Weissman compares The Turn of the Screw to other detective novels.
Virgílio
- Quotes from this Roman author are found on the Blast Door Map.
Watership Down
by Richard Adams
- Kate finds Sawyer sitting on the beach reading this book. Boone said that he was reading it while on vacation in Australia. According to Sawyer, the book had just washed ashore.
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz
by L. Frank Baum
- Henry Gale é o nome do tio da Dorothy. Quando é capturado, Ben (insistindo chamar-se "Henry Gale"} afirma ter chegado à ilha num balão, como o Wizard. O real Henry Gale aparentemente chegou.
A Wrinkle in Time
by Madeleine L'Engle