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15 livros famosos cujos autores foram inspirados por sonhos

Clara

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Li na seção de Artes e Humanidades do site Bachelors Degree Online.
Em alguns casos achei que a inspiração é óbvia, como nos livros mencionados de H.G. Wells e D.H.Lawrence.
Outros eu já sabia que foram inspirados por sonhos, como os textos de Lovecraft e o Frankenstein de Mary Shelley.
Mas alguns foram supresa pra mim, caso do livro do Stephen King e do Stuart Little de E.B. White.

No site, a matéria contem links com textos bem interessantes sobre cada um dos livros.
Clique aqui pra acessar o original.

01 - The Twilight Series by Stephenie Meyer: From Stephenie Meyer's dreams of a sparkly vampire talking to a puny human woman came the media juggernaut about sparkly vampires and the puny human women who love them. She has yet to mention whether or not the series' glorification of emotional abuse also came from her nocturnal adventures.

02 - Much of H.P. Lovecraft's Works:
It probably comes as little shock to anyone even tangentially familiar with the work of horror master H.P. Lovecraft that the man pulled his inspiration from the vivid nightmares he suffered most nights. Any novel or short story featuring the Great Old Ones especially drew from the more twisted corners of his subconscious.

03 - Pilgrim's Progress by John Bunyan: Though no definitive answers exist regarding whether or not John Bunyan launched the classic Pilgrim's Progress because of his dreams, he certainly pulled plenty of inspiration from their structure. So while nobody knows for certain, the fact that he so diligently paid attention to how they operated in order to pen his unearthly prose still earns him a place on this list.

04 - The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson: As with most of H.P. Lovecraft's terrifying tales, this horror classic also sprang into existence because of its writer's graphic nightmares. In this case, a "fine bogey tale" tormenting him as he slept grew into one of the most famous and genuinely scary English-language novels ever penned — most especially considering its all-too-human antagonist and protagonist.

05 - Misery by Stephen King: Another visceral, memorable novel revolving around humanity's ugliest tendencies unsurprisingly popped straight from respected author Stephen King's sleeping life. While dozing off on a flight to London, he found inspiration in a chilling nightmare about a crazed woman killing and mutilating a favorite writer and binding a book in his skin. The final product, of course, came out just a little bit different.

06 - Frankenstein by Mary Shelley: Following the death of her and Percy Bysshe Shelley's daughter at only 12 days old, the heartbroken Mary Wollstonecroft Godwin dreamt of the child coming back to life after massaging her near a fire. She wrote of it in the collaborative journal she kept with her poet lover (later husband), and most literary critics believe it later grew into one of the most iconic, influential horror novels of all time.

07 - Stuart Little by E.B. White: One of the most memorable and beloved characters from children's literature sauntered into E.B. White's subconscious in the 1920s, though he didn't transition from notes to novel until over two decades later. From there, the tiny boy with the face and fur of a mouse became a classic that continues to delight both adults and kids even today.

08 - Much of Edgar Allan Poe's Works: Though separating fact from fiction when it comes to Edgar Allan Poe's internal life remains a difficult task, most literary critics believe his legendary, hallucinatory poems and short stories stemmed from troubled nightmares. Considering how frequently dreams and dreamlike imagery and structure crop up in his oeuvre, it's a more than safe assumption.

09 - Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte: Part of the eponymous character's personal arc stems from her highly detailed dreams, both asleep and diurnal slips in and out of consciousness. Though she may not have necessarily pulled inspiration from her own personal dreams, Charlotte Bronte wielded the common literary device of prophetic, subconscious visions, carefully aping their real-life hallucinatory, stream-of-consciousness structure.

10 - Fantasia of the Unconscious by D.H. Lawrence:
Really, most of D.H. Lawrence's more lilting, dreamlike works such as Women in Love could qualify for inclusion here. However, Fantasia of the Unconscious so perfectly maps out such experiences and explains their importance and inspiration in such great detail it edges out any other competing works.

11 - Book of Dreams by Jack Kerouac: Everything readers need to know about this novel comes straight from the title. Beat poster boy Jack Kerouac kept and published a book comprised entirely of his dreams, spanning from 1952 to 1960 and starring characters from many of his other works.

12 - Jonathan Livingston Seagull by Richard Bach:
Considering the heavy spiritual and philosophical core of Jonathan Livingston Seagull, it probably comes as little surprise that it initially sprung from Richard Bach's daydreams of a drifting seabird. Interestingly enough, he could only finish the original draft following another series of subconscious visions!

13 - The Apprenticeship of Big Toe P by Reiko Matsuura: Though available in English and enjoying cult rather than mainstream attention, the novel of a woman who wakes up with a penis for a toe became a bestseller in its native Japan. Her incredibly original premise, meant to explore gender identity and relations, came to her through a most unusual dream she eventually adapted into a favored work of fiction.

14 - Twelve Stories and a Dream by H.G. Wells: "A Dream of Armageddon," specifically, though some claim that many of H.G. Wells' other classic science-fiction works likely sprouted partially from his dream life. As the title describes, this harrowing work speculates on the dangerous directions in which mankind's technology could ultimately lead it.

15 - "Kubla Khan" from Christabel by Samuel Taylor Coleridge: One of the most famous examples of dream-inspired literature, the famous poem — printed in the book Christabel – wafted into Samuel Taylor Coleridge's brain from a combination of sleep and opium. One of his most beloved works, he described it as a "fragment" rather than a whole, though most critics these days analyze it as the latter.
 
Bem diferente essa lista, não imaginava que tantas obras tinham sido inspiradas por sonhos... E quer dizer que o Lovecraft tinha pesadelos com aquelas coisas? :susto: Nossa deviam ser terríveis as noites dele... e que bom que ele resolveu compartilhá-las conosco... :hahano:

E mais uma vez o King aparece! Definitivamente, já dá para fazer uma lista de listas com os livros dele...
 
Sonhos são uma excelente fonte de inspiração pra livros e sempre gosto de saber se um livro que li teve isso como fonte inspiradora.

A pessoa pode até não se lembrar 100% do que sonhou exatamente em todos os detalhes, mas se foi impactante, só de lembrar dos fatos mais importantes e marcantes, fica mais fácil completar e acrescentar depois.
 
Já me vieram à cabeça mesmo algumas melodias sonhando ou naquele estado pré-sono. Duas delas eu peguei o celular na hora e gravei em voz, pena que ainda não consegui compor algo para tornar a reprodução pública aceitável. :dente:
 
Comigo já aconteceu várias vezes no estado pré-sono, mas nunca durante sonhos. Na verdade é comum ter ideias criativas nessa hora, não lembro a explicação exata, mas há estudos sobre isso. Algumas das melhores ideias chegam quando a gente está quase dormindo (e às vezes com preguiça demais de ir anotar e aí acaba esquecendo e perdendo a ideia).
 
O compositor e violinista Giuseppe Tartini (1692 - 1770) tem como uma de suas obras mais conhecidas a sonata chamada “O Trilo do Diabo”, mundialmente famosa por sua exigência excessiva, capaz de colocar em apuros até os violinistas mais avançados.

tartini1.jpg

A lenda por trás dessa sonata, narrada pelo próprio Tartini em uma carta a um amigo, o astrônomo francês Jérôme Lalande, conta como, durante um sono, o diabo apareceu para o músico, oferecendo-se como seu servo em troca de sua alma. Antes de aceitar, o compositor o desafiou a tocar uma melodia em seu violino para testar suas habilidades. Os sons que saíram do seu instrumento foram tão impressionantes que Tartini perdeu o fôlego, o que, segundo seu relato, o fez despertar. Nas palavras do músico, tratou-se de “uma sonata tão bonita e maravilhosa, tocada com tanta arte e inteligência, como ele jamais havia concebido. Ao acordar, Tartini pegou imediatamente seu violino, tentando memorizar a melodia; no entanto, ele disse a Lalande que, embora essa obra fosse a melhor coisa que ele já havia composto na sua vida, era medíocre em comparação ao que tinha presenciado durante o sono.
 

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