- Confidence trick (books and literature)
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Contents
Notable confidence tricks in literature
Nineteenth century
- The Government Inspector (1836) — play by Nikolai Gogol; the main character deceives the corrupt officials of a small town into believing that he is a government inspector
- Dead Souls (1836) — novel by Nikolai Gogol; the main character poses as a wealthy landowner so that he can acquire the "souls" of dead serfs
- The Confidence-Man (1857) — novel by Herman Melville; the main character tests confidence of other people
- Les Misérables (1862) — novel by Victor Hugo; the Thénardiers, two of the primary villains, scam money from people
- Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1884) — novel by Mark Twain; two characters, The Duke and the Dauphin are grifters
- "The Red-Headed League" (1891) — Sherlock Holmes story by Arthur Conan Doyle, which involves a sort of confidence trick used to enable a bank robbery
Twentieth century
- Simon Templar (1928—1963), also known as "The Saint," a main character in Leslie Charteris' novels and stories who is often involved in scams and cons
- The Twelve Chairs (1928) and The Little Golden Calf (1931) – satirical novels by Ilf and Petrov; the main character, Ostap Bender, is a con man, who has carried out most of the tricks listed below, and The Little Golden Calf contains a fictional secret society of con men called Children of Lieutenant Schmidt
- The Space Merchants (1953) — sci-fi novel by Frederik Pohl and Cyril Kornbluth is replete with con games practiced by corporations
- Confessions of Felix Krull, Confidence Man: The Early Years (1954) – Thomas Mann's unfinished novel about a German con man
- The Stainless Steel Rat (1961 – present) – series of sci-fi novels by Harry Harrison; the protagonist, James Bolivar diGriz ("Slippery Jim"), is a con man and uses abundant schemes and frauds
- Travis McGee (1964–1984), fictional character in John D. MacDonald's series of detective novels, frequently uses con games or has them tried against him
- Only When I Larf (1968) - comic thriller by Len Deighton describing the activities of a team of three fictional confidence tricksters.
- The Golden Egg (1984) — psychological thriller novel by Tim Krabbé features a chemistry teacher who employs con for the purpose of kidnapping
- Repairman Jack (1984–present), fictional character in F. Paul Wilson's series of novels, often runs scams on other con artists.
- If Tomorrow Comes (1985) — novel by Sidney Sheldon, which has a con artist as the main character and is mostly based on trickery and deception
- Hellblazer (1988 – present) — ongoing horror comic book series; the main character, John Constantine, uses confidence scams, trickery and magick
- Many of the crime novels by Jim Thompson involve confidence artists
- The Brethren (2000) — novel by John Grisham features a con run by three incarcerated judges
Twenty-first century
- Matchstick Men (2002) — novel by Eric Garcia; the main characters are con artists
- American Gods (2001) — novel by Neil Gaiman uses a two-man con as a major plot element
- The Egyptologist (2004) — In this Arthur Phillips novel, Ralph Trilipush is a brilliant con who eventually cons himself.
- Going Postal (2004) — Terry Pratchett's Discworld novel features a convicted and condemned con artist Moist von Lipwig, who applies the principles of the con in his new job as Postmaster General
- The Lies of Locke Lamora (2006) — fantasy novel by Scott Lynch follows the adventures of a group of con artists known as the Gentlemen Bastards
- The Collectors (2006) — novel by David Baldacci; one of the main characters cons a casino owner out of $40 million.
- Mr. Monk in Trouble — mystery novel by Lee Goldberg based on the television series Monk - features several subplots set in 1850s Trouble where criminals salt their mines with rather ingenious methods. These include one miner who consumes a cure with a gold tonic in it who relieves himself all over his property, and one who laces the buckshot on his gun with gold dust.
See also
Categories:- Confidence tricks
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