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Government Conspiracy Fiction Books That Will Make You Question Everything

By Ann Lee


For a book that is packed with excitement, nonstop action, and a main character who is heroic as they come, the classic novel The Thirty-Nine Steps is a great pick for a revolutionary paranoid thriller. Author John Buchan might not have known just how many more government conspiracy fiction books he would feature his character of Richard Hannay in when he published this story in 1915. In the character's debut novel, he finds himself on the run in a series of unlikely situations.

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 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.

The Manchurian Candidate is a novel that has been adapted to film twice, but many fans would say that neither of these adaptations can compare to the original book. Richard Condon's groundbreaking novel was published in 1959 when many people in the United States were concerned about communism. His book involves a brainwashing plot to make an unsuspecting man into an assassin.

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.

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.

The Crying Lot 49 came out in 1966, and it is one of the shorter pieces by the author Thomas Pynchon. What this story lacks in length, however, it makes up for in the quality of the narrative and story being told. The story, filled with cultural references to the Beatles and other icons of the 60s, is about a mail service's plot that is over 500 years old.

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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