dream book - meaning and definition. What is dream book
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What (who) is dream book - definition

BOOK BY IAIN PEARS
The Dream of Scipio (book)

Dream (disambiguation)         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Dream (musical group); Dream (pop group); Dreams (song); Dream (Group); DREAM; Dreams (single); Dreams (album); The Dream (poem); Dream (album); The Dream (disambiguation); Dream (ship); Bimong; Sad Dream; The Dream (album); Dream (band); The Dream; Dream (2008); Dreams (film); Dream (group); The Dream (painting); Dream (film); The Dream (film); Dream (song); Dream Song; The Dream (song); Dream (EP)
A dream is an experience during sleep. It may also refer to a wish, as in a motivating personal ambition or goal, a romantic prospect, or a vision of future change.
Dream (1944 song)         
ORIGINAL SONG WRITTEN AND COMPOSED BY JOHNNY MERCER
Dream (When You're Feeling Blue)
"Dream", sometimes referred to as "Dream (When You're Feeling Blue)", is a jazz and pop standard with words and music written by Johnny Mercer in 1944. He originally wrote it as a theme for his radio program.
Tangerine Dream discography         
WIKIMEDIA BAND DISCOGRAPHY
Tangerine dream discography
The electronic music group Tangerine Dream has released more than three hundred albums, singles, EPs and compilations since the group was formed in 1967.

Wikipedia

The Dream of Scipio (novel)

The Dream of Scipio is a novel by Iain Pears. It is set in Provence at three different critical moments of Western civilization—the collapse of the Roman Empire in the fifth century, the Black Death in the fourteenth, the Second World War in the twentieth—through which the fortunes of three men are followed:

  • Manlius Hippomanes, a Gallic aristocrat obsessed with the preservation of Roman civilization
  • Olivier de Noyen, a poet and scholar, active in the Papal Court at Avignon
  • Julien Barneuve, an intellectual who cooperates with the Vichy government

The story of each man is woven through the narrative, all linked by the Dream of Scipio, written by Manlius (not Cicero's eponymous classical text) and rediscovered by Olivier and Julien. Inspired by the teachings of Sophia, a Neoplatonist philosopher and the daughter of a student of Hypatia, Manlius composes the text to justify the decisions he takes when facing attack by the Visigoths and Burgundians, with little support from Rome. Religious issues, and how politics have influenced religious tolerance, shape all three stories: the roots of twentieth-century anti-semitism are traced and linked to other political decisions to use Jews as scapegoats. The three stories are united by an extended deliberation how one resolves ethical conflicts, emotional commitments, and the quest for the true meaning of human life.

The story is narrated by an omniscient narrator, who tells the reader many things which the characters have no way of knowing such as how Olivier de Noyen, diligently searching for ancient manuscripts, narrowly missed finding the only copy of the correspondence between Manlius and Sophia, which could have become a classic comparable to the letters of Abelard and Héloïse, and how this manuscript was irrevocably lost in a fire fifty years later; or how after Julien Barneuve's death, the photo of his Jewish beloved was carelessly thrown away while the woman herself was sent by the Nazis to Auschwitz.

Examples of use of dream book
1. She is the author of four books of poems, "The Venus Hottentot," "Body of Life," "Antebellum Dream Book" and "American Sublime," which was the finalist for the Pulitzer Prize.