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Government Conspiracy Fiction Books That Changed The World

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 is a book that came out in 1943 and was written by Graham Greene. The backdrop of World War II and the Nazi regime made many readers very interested in this book when it was first published. It had to do with the way Nazis would blackmail individuals into cooperating with them.

Many people have heard of The Manchurian Candidate because of the film by the same title featuring Denzel Washington, but plenty of others knew about it long before that. Richard Condon wrote the novel in 1959, and the fear of communism definitely had a big influence on the writing of this book and its reception. The protagonist is subject to brainwashing to make him carry out an assassination.

Whenever a tragic or controversial even happens in the public's eye, there are always those who are prone to make speculations whenever there is any level of uncertainty in the facts. John F. Kennedy's assassination was certainly one of these events, and Winter Kills is a definitive book about the events and the theories. Richard Condon's story explores what happened as well as what conspirators think happened.

Many people have heard about The Illuminatus! Trilogy because of the huge impact it has had on society. Although the trilogy is now usually printed as one book, they were published separately with the first novel coming out in 1969, and the last one in 1971. The time when the books were coming out was a historic and revolutionary time, and the book reflected this with the various genres and subjects courageously explored.

Thomas Pynchon's novella called The Crying Lot 49 may be a relatively quick read, but it is a literary journey worth taking. Published in 1966, it is full of cultural references out of that colorful time that Pynchon is very prone to making. The plot in this story has to do with two postal services that were pitted against each other due to a conflict dating all the way back to the Middle Ages.

Gravity's Rainbow is one of the deepest and most complex novels a reader might come across when looking for a paranoid thriller. Although there is a large number of characters and the book deals with topics that are at a very high level, if the reader is up for the challenge, it can be very illuminating. When the book came out, many people saw it to be too obscene or not comprehensible at all.




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