Sub-genres
- Examples
- Fiction
and
literature
Homer's
Odyssey
is
one
of
the
oldest
stories
in
the
Western
world
and
is
regarded
as
an
early
prototype
of
the
thriller.
The
hero
Odysseus
makes
a
perilous
voyage
home
after
the
Trojan
War,
battling
extraordinary
hardships
in
order
to
be
reunited
with
his
wife
Penelope.
He
has
to
contend
with
villains
such
as
the
Cyclops,
a
one-eyed
giant,
and
the
Sirens,
whose
sweet
singing
lures
sailors
to
their
doom.
In
most
cases,
Odysseus
uses
cunning
instead
of
brute
force
to
overcome
his
adversaries.
The
Count
of
Monte
Cristo
is a
swashbuckling
revenge
thriller
about
a
man
named
Edmond
Dantès
who
is
betrayed
by
his
friends
and
sent
to
languish
in
the
notorious
Château
d'If.
His
only
companion
is
an
old
man
who
teaches
him
everything
from
philosophy
to
mathematics
to
swordplay.
Just
before
the
old
man
dies,
he
reveals
to
Dantès
the
secret
location
of a
great
treasure.
Shortly
after,
Dantès
engineers
a
daring
escape
and
uses
the
treasure
to
reinvent
himself
as
the
Count
of
Monte
Cristo.
Thirsting
for
vengeance,
he
sets
out
to
punish
those
who
destroyed
his
life.
Dracula
is a
gothic
supernatural
thriller
told
in
the
first
person
(diaries,
letters,
newspaper
clippings).
A
young
Englishman
named
Jonathan
Harker
travels
to
the
Carpathian
Mountains
to
meet
a
client
named
Count
Dracula.
But
when
the
Count
shows
his
horrifying
true
colours,
Harker
barely
escapes
with
his
life.
The
Count
soon
arrives
in
England,
bringing
with
him
death
and
menace.
Harker
and
his
terrified
friends
are
forced
to
turn
to
Dr.
Van
Helsing,
who
uses
modern
science
to
battle
ancient
superstition.
The
Thirty-Nine
Steps
is
an
early
thriller
by
John
Buchan,
in
which
an
innocent
man
becomes
the
prime
suspect
in a
murder
case
and
finds
himself
on
the
run
from
both
the
police
and
enemy
spies.
Heart
of
Darkness
is a
first-person
within
a
first-person
account
about
a
man
named
Marlowe
who
travels
up
the
Congo
River
in
search
of
an
enigmatic
Belgian
trader
named
Kurtz.
Layer
by
layer,
the
atrocities
of
the
human
soul
and
man's
inhumanity
to
man
are
peeled
away.
Marlowe
finds
it
increasingly
difficult
to
tell
where
civilization
ends
and
where
barbarism
begins.
The
Spy
Who
Came
in
from
the
Cold
by
John
Le
Carre
is
set
in
the
world
of
Cold
War
espionage
and
helped
to
usher
in
an
era
of
more
realistic
thriller
fiction,
based
around
professional
spies
and
the
battle
of
wits
between
rival
spymasters.
The
Bourne
Identity
is
one
of
the
first
thrillers
to
be
written
in
the
modern
style
that
we
know
today.
A
man
with
gunshot
wounds
is
found
floating
unconscious
in
the
Mediterranean
Sea.
Brought
ashore
and
nursed
back
to
health,
he
wakes
up
with
amnesia.
Fiercely
determined
to
uncover
the
secrets
of
his
past,
he
embarks
on a
quest
that
sends
him
spiraling
into
a
web
of
violence
and
deceit.
He
is
astounded
to
learn
that
knowledge
of
hand-to-hand
combat,
firearms,
and
tradecraft
seem
to
come
naturally
to
him.
First
Blood
is
widely
considered
to
be
the
father
of
the
modern
action
novel.
A
young
Vietnam
veteran,
suffering
from
post-traumatic
stress
disorder,
encounters
an
older
sheriff
who
is a
Korean
War
veteran.
When
the
sheriff
tries
to
drive
him
out
of
town,
a
version
of
the
Vietnam
War
erupts
in
the
woods,
hills,
and
caves
of
rural
Kentucky.
This
becomes
not
only
a
clash
of
generations,
but
also
a
clash
between
conventional
and
guerrilla
warfare.
Novelists
closely
associated
with
the
genre
include
Robert
Ludlum,
Eric
Ambler,
David
Morrell,
Frederick
Forsyth,
Dan
Brown,
James
Phelan,
Tom
Clancy,
Michael
Crichton,
Ian
Fleming,
and
Alistair
MacLean.