The Space Merchants

mass market paperback, 169 pages

English language

Published March 7, 1987 by St. Martin's Press.

ISBN:
978-0-312-90655-9
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OCLC Number:
15372268

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Mitch Courtney is a Copysmith Star Class, fighting his way up the corporate ladder in an age when consumerism has conquered America. Products like Coffiest, the morning cupful laced with an addicting chemical, have captured the population's minds...and souls. And now Mitch has something to sell that would take every dirty advertising trick in the book: the planet Venus—hot, malevolent, and America's newest colony. But Venus' inhospitable climate is the least of his worries: his beautiful wife is dumping him, a fellow exec is sabotaging him, the Consies (aka Conservationists) want to stop him, and somebody is trying to kill him.„in a searing satire of corporate America where everything is fair—even murder. --back cover

20 editions

When advertising rules the world, Venus is next!

The Space Merchants was originally published in 1952, that’s 73 years ago, and it always boggles my mind to think about that. In this novel we follow the perspective of Mitchell Courtenay, a “star class copysmith” who is quickly rising to the top of an advertising company, that is pretty much ruling the world at this point.

Most people are consumers, with horrible lives and repetitive work, endlessly paying off debts that will only grow as they keep on existing. It is a sad reality that is not quite fiction in today’s world.

This book is a satire, a style I hadn’t really read before. Most events and characters are bizarre and somewhat foolish. The protagonist will say the most outlandish stuff as a matter of fact, when it comes to how humans can be controlled and suggested, it sounds ironic, and kind of funny, and at the …

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Subjects

  • Science fiction