Thursday, April 5, 2018

Government Conspiracy Fiction Books You Won't Want To Put Down

By Ann Lee


The Thirty-Nine Steps is one of the first books to explore the genre of the paranoid thriller. It was written by John Buchan and came out in 1915, and is the first of his government conspiracy fiction books that features the character of Richard Hannay, who appears in Buchan's other works. This ambiguously titled novel follows Hannay's unlikely adventures, full of action and heroics.

Some of the best tales about conspiracies take place on a small scale, rather than being part of an international plot for world domination. This small-scale approach was used effectively in Dashiell Hammett's "Nightmare Town". This short story was released in 1924 and is about a small town in Arizona with a plot to commit insurance fraud that turns deadly.

The Ministry of Fear was written in 1943, when people wanted to read stories about Nazis and World War II. Graham Greene's book is about the Nazis' method of blackmailing people into submission. It's easy to understand the title after reading this book.

Although there are two movies that The Manchurian Candidate has been made into, neither of them are quite true enough to the original story. This was a novel that Richard Condon wrote, and it first came out in 1959. At this time, the fear of communism was running high, and this is reflected in his story about a man being brainwashed in a communist plot.

One of the tragic events that happened in US history with unsolved mysteries surrounding it that have made conspirators come up with their own theories is the assassination of John F. Kennedy. Winter Kills was one of the first novels to explore this mystery. Richard Condon wrote this book in 1974, and it is very dark in nature considering the material it covers.

When Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson got together to write a book about counterculture and conspiracies, they might not have known just how big it was going to become. Their work became known as The Illuminatus! Trilogy, three novels that are usually printed as one anthology. Published from 1969 to 1971, their work combines genres like psychedelia, horror, and comedy.

For a book that won't take too long to read, Thomas Pynchon's novella called The Crying Lot 49 is a good book that goes by pretty quickly. Published in 1966 and taking place in that era, this is a book that has a lot of cultural references to things that were popular at the time. The conspiracy in the story is one that goes back to the Middle Ages.

For a book that breaks all boundaries and can change the reader's outlook on life completely, Gravity's Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon is an incredible read. In this novel, he goes everywhere from high to low class, propriety to obscenity, and covers a wealth of complex information. This is not a very easy read because of the long character list and heavy topics, but it a great piece to make the reader think.




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