🚚 Free Worldwide Shipping on All Orders!Shop Now
HomeStore

The Manchurian Candidate

The Manchurian Candidate

6b, Richard Condon First Edition 1959

Notes

The Manchurian Candidate is a Cold War political thriller that explores the fears and anxieties of mid-20th-century America, particularly the threat of communism and psychological manipulation. Written by Richard Condon and published in 1959, the novel reflects a period marked by McCarthyism, the Korean War, and widespread paranoia about infiltration and brainwashing by foreign powers.

The story centers on U.S. soldiers captured during the Korean War who are subjected to intense psychological conditioning by communist forces. One of them, Raymond Shaw, is unknowingly programmed to become an assassin, while his fellow soldier, Major Bennett Marco, slowly realizes that their shared memories of heroism are false. As Marco investigates, the novel exposes the vulnerability of democratic institutions to hidden control and propaganda.

Beyond its suspenseful plot, the book functions as a sharp political satire. It critiques demagoguery, media manipulation, and the ease with which public opinion can be shaped through fear. The Manchurian Candidate ultimately asks unsettling questions about free will, loyalty, and how fragile personal and national identity can be in an age of ideological conflict.

Description

Tan speckled binding with solid blue spine, dust jacket, very fine condition.

 

 

 

$950.00
The Manchurian Candidate
$950.00
Product image 1
Product image 2
Product image 3
Product image 4
Product image 5

Description

6b, Richard Condon First Edition 1959

Notes

The Manchurian Candidate is a Cold War political thriller that explores the fears and anxieties of mid-20th-century America, particularly the threat of communism and psychological manipulation. Written by Richard Condon and published in 1959, the novel reflects a period marked by McCarthyism, the Korean War, and widespread paranoia about infiltration and brainwashing by foreign powers.

The story centers on U.S. soldiers captured during the Korean War who are subjected to intense psychological conditioning by communist forces. One of them, Raymond Shaw, is unknowingly programmed to become an assassin, while his fellow soldier, Major Bennett Marco, slowly realizes that their shared memories of heroism are false. As Marco investigates, the novel exposes the vulnerability of democratic institutions to hidden control and propaganda.

Beyond its suspenseful plot, the book functions as a sharp political satire. It critiques demagoguery, media manipulation, and the ease with which public opinion can be shaped through fear. The Manchurian Candidate ultimately asks unsettling questions about free will, loyalty, and how fragile personal and national identity can be in an age of ideological conflict.

Description

Tan speckled binding with solid blue spine, dust jacket, very fine condition.

 

 

 

The Manchurian Candidate | Moons Rare Books