Published 9, Feb 2020, 12:06 PM
HIGHLIGHTS
There have been many such incidents in the world
Which the authors imagined before the event
Not just imagination but the form of the book
Later on they really happened on earth
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There are so many things that have happened in the world that the writers imagined before they happened. Much like Ramayana before Rama was born. The Ramayana was not written at first, it was popular. But here are some of the events that were not limited to the author's imagination as they found life on the pages of the book and later they really did happen at some point.
Literature has been written about the history of the Titanic, which sank in two in 1912 after colliding with an iceberg floating in the Atlantic Ocean. Surprisingly, the British writer Morgan Robertson wrote a story, 'Futility, or the Wreck of the Titan', about 14 years before the Titanic was buried. That was the story of the sinking of a ship named Titan after being hit by an iceberg. More surprisingly, like the Titanic, Morgan's Titan sank in the North Atlantic Ocean. According to the story of his book published in 1898, Titan was the largest passenger ship ever built. Whose drowning was impossible. Similarly, after the Titanic was built in 1912, it was said that the Titanic was the largest ship ever built and that the sinking of the Titanic was impossible. But that impossible was possible.
Arthur C. Clarke is a well-known name in the world of science fiction or fiction. He mentioned a kind of newspad in his story '2001: A Space Odyssey'. According to the book, published in 1986, the NewsPad is a device that can be easily carried anywhere. As soon as you ask for it, any information or news of the world comes and appears. Stanley Kubrick's 1981 film: A Space Odyssey was inspired by the author's short story, The Sentinel. The writer and director co-wrote the screenplay. Later, he made his novel with a 130-page screenplay. Surprisingly, 42 years after the publication of Arthur C. Clarke's novel, a coincidence occurred. In 2010, when Steve Jobs brought his iPad, it turned out to be exactly the same as Arthur C. Clarke's description of the newspad.
Looking Backward, by American author Edward Bellamy, was published in 18 At that time there was an economic recession all over the world. The protagonist of that novel, Julian West, fell into a deep sleep one day in 18. When he woke up in 2000. America has become a democratic state in those days. Julian West goes to the modern market one day and buys things in exchange for a card in exchange for money. And punches the card that takes the price of the thing he bought. The credit or debit card used today was conceived by Edward Bellamy Seta in the 18th century.
Neil Armstrong and Edwin Aldrin set foot on the moon in 1989, almost 100 years after Julverne's 185-year-old From the Earth to the Moon. The 2001 attack on the Twin Towers bears a striking resemblance to what Tom Clancy described in his 1994 Debate of Honor.