Friday 23 March 2018

Government Conspiracy Fiction Books That Will Make You Question Everything

By Ann Lee


Plenty of people are familiar with The Thirty-Nine Steps because of the many different adaptations it has been made into, but only those who have followed the story very carefully are able to understand what the mysterious title means. This was one of the original government conspiracy fiction books, and it was published in 1915 and written by John Buchan. This is the first book with his iconic action hero Richard Hannay.

While there are plenty of great novels about conspiracies that take place on a very high level, such as within or between governments, sometimes it is easier to relate to a story when it isn't on such a large scale. "Nightmare Town" is a short story that Dashiell Hammett wrote in 1924. The plot consists of a small town that plans to commit insurance fraud and results in people being murdered.

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.

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.

John F. Kennedy's assassination was a tragedy, and an event that left a lot of people wondering who really did it. While conspirators can speculate to no end without ever having any proof of their beliefs, Richard Condon chose to express his feelings in a story called Winter Kills. This dark tale covers both what is known to have happened and goes into theories as well.

The Illuminatus! Trilogy came into existence thanks to the work of Robert Anton Wilson and Robert Shea. These two men got together to write three books that were published over the course of several years in the late 60s and early 70s, and combines genres that were new and controversial at the time like psychedelia. This collection is one of the most widely read in the genre.

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.

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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