Blog â Posted on Friday, Jul 31
45 Best True Crime Books of All Time
Humans have long been fascinated by all things fearful and forbidden. For centuries now, the pinnacle of that fascination has been crime.
That's why weâve unearthed the most wickedly wonderful works for your enjoyment. Whether youâre intrigued by domestic disappearances or monstrous murderers, youâre sure to have the time of your life with the best true crime books of all time.
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1. In Cold Blood by Truman Capote
Arguably the book that launched the genre as we know it, Capoteâs career-defining work begins with a shocking quadruple homicide in a quiet Kansas town. Though the case itself is open-and-shut, the author still manages to extract a spellbinding, psychologically rich story in the aftermath, based on interviews with the killers and exhaustive research on the victims. If youâre just starting to read true crime â or hoping to write it yourself one day â In Cold Blood is an unmissable introduction to the genre.
2. Helter Skelter by Vincent Bugliosi
The Manson family murders were some of the most sensationalized killings of the 21st century. But how many of the rumors around them actually stemmed from reality? Vincent Bugliosi, who prosecuted Manson in 1970, sets the record straight in this chilling yet mesmerizing account of his investigation, arrest, and conviction. (The title is taken from Mansonâs notorious delusion of an imminent and destructive race war, which he dubbed âHelter Skelter.â)
3. The Executionerâs Song by Norman Mailer
Another dramatic murder case takes center stage in the Pulitzer Prize-winning The Executionerâs Song. Yet the interesting element here is not the crime itself â a relatively run-of-the-mill double homicide â but the wish of the killer, Gary Gilmore, to be executed as soon as possible. Mailer is a dutiful biographer, documenting Gilmoreâs early life and criminal acts, but the beating heart of the story is definitely the irony surrounding our ideas about death⌠especially in context of the (at the time) recently reinstated death penalty in the United States.
4. The Stranger Beside Me by Ann Rule
We wouldnât leave the twisted tale of Ted Bundy off this list, and as a dedicated writer and one of Bundyâs closest friends, Ann Rule is uniquely qualified to tell it. She paints young Bundy as a fresh-faced college student, empathetic and kind, someone she would have trusted to care for her own children. They fell out of touch in 1974, and Rule soon heard reports of brutal murders carried out by a man matching Bundyâs description. Yet it took years for her to even admit the possibility of his involvement â a truth that clearly haunts her and colors her narration, lending this book incredible weight even as the prose remains crisp and readable.
5. Zodiac by Robert Graysmith
This book is the definitive account of the still-unidentified Zodiac Killer, who terrorized Northern California during the 1960s and 70s. Robert Graysmith was a cartoonist at the San Francisco Chronicle when the Zodiac began sending letters to the paper, sparking a 50-year mystery and Graysmithâs life mission to unmask the culprit. Zodiac is the result of over ten yearsâ painstaking research, with a number of plausible theories presented â though of course, none that panned out. Any reader whoâs a sucker for decade-spanning cold cases, this oneâs for you.
6. The Journalist and the Murderer by Janet Malcolm
In 1970, a pregnant woman and her two daughters were stabbed to death in North Carolina. The prime suspect? Her husband, Jeffrey Macdonald â who quickly proposed a book deal to bestselling nonfiction writer Joe McGinniss, under the impression that McGinnissâ work would exonerate him. But that book is not the one listed here. Instead, itâs Janet Malcolmâs brilliantly meta masterpiece about the actual relationship between McGinniss and MacDonald: how the journalist pretended to believe his subjectâs claims of innocence, all the while scheming to reveal evidence of his guilt (a deception Malcolm labels as âmorally indefensibleâ).
7. Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil by John Berendt
Frequently listed as one of the best true crime books of all time, Berendtâs work is renowned for its holistic style, vividly conjuring not just the murder in question but also the distinct atmosphere of 1980s Georgia. Thatâs not to say the murder itself isnât fascinating: a male escort killed by a respected local antiques dealer, who then endured four trials to be acquitted. But itâs the town's residents who make this story really exceptional, as they give their individual takes on the incident and reveal the vibrant character of the Deep South.
8. Shot in the Heart by Mikal Gilmore
Remember The Executionerâs Song, number three on this list, which revolved around murderer Gary Gilmore and his wish to die? Take a look at the authorâs surname here: Mikal is Garyâs younger brother. Shot in the Heart recounts their upbringing âinside the house where murder is born,â giving Garyâs offenses an eerie fatalistic ring and making clear that Mikal barely escaped a similar end. His unflinching descriptions of the familyâs alcoholism and abuse are not easy to get through, but they do facilitate a more nuanced view of even the most dire criminals.
9. Mindhunter by John E. Douglas
The inspiration for the Netflix series of the same name, this book by former FBI agent Douglas offers a fascinating glimpse into the bureauâs criminal profiling process. It includes profiles of famous murderers, such as Wayne Williams and Edmund Kemper, and even suggests specific steps to help police and special agents capture more felons â making Mindhunter the only title on this list thatâs both riveting true crime and genuinely applicable self-help.
10. My Dark Places by James Ellroy
Not to be confused with the similarly titled Gillian Flynn book, this smooth hybrid of memoir and investigative journalism follows Ellroy as he attempts to solve his motherâs murder. Though Geneva Ellroyâs case was abandoned for nearly 40 years, Ellroy â also a thriller writer â is determined to crack it, hiring an L.A. county homicide detective to help him out. Intertwined with details of their investigation are memories of Ellroyâs childhood, and profound self-examination of what his mother truly meant to him.
11. The Run of His Life by Jeffrey Toobin
O.J. Simpsonâs infamous âtrial of the centuryâ has been rehashed innumerable times over the years, but never with such razor-sharp perception of absolutely every element in the case. Toobin, a Harvard-educated lawyer and high-level legal analyst, portrays both sides of the trial with total acuity and depth â demonstrating the utter exceptionality of what happened, while also unpacking the reasons why. If youâre remotely interested in criminal law, this one is a must-read (or a must-watch in the form of the Netflix adaptation, The People v. O. J. Simpson).
12. The Orchid Thief by Susan Orlean
Love the detailed analyses of true crime, but not so much its authorsâ penchant for murders? The Orchid Thief is your saving grace: despite the breezy premise about a group of âorchid poachersâ in south Florida, the authorâs thorough research and gorgeous narration make this book just as compelling as any other work in the genre. Susan Orlean is the undisputed master of weaving quotidian subject matter into literary gold (as she also proved in 2018âs The Library Book).
13. The Devil in the White City by Erik Larson
Okay, now back to murder â in fact, back to one of the first documented serial killers in American history. The year is 1893, and the World's Exposition in Chicago (the titular âWhite Cityâ) is in full swing. Its chief architect, Daniel Burnham, observes his success as a proud parent would their child⌠but beneath the shining surface, something rotten lurks. A pharmacist by the name of H.H. Holmes plans to lure visitors to his âWorldâs Fair Hotel,â where he will murder and dispose of them via a Sweeney Todd-esque setup. How many victims will Holmes claim, and who (if anyone) can stop this devil?
14. And Every Word Is True by Gary McAvoy â Indie Spotlight
Think of And Every Word Is True as the indie companion to In Cold Blood. This bold, revisionist work casts doubt on the open-and-shut case in Capoteâs masterpiece. Using new evidence from the archives of the Kansas Bureau of Investigations â not to mention letters from one of the convicted killers â Gary McAvoy tells a spine tingling tale about sinister conspiracies and government coverups. This thrilling work casts a classic American case in a new light.
Check out what Reedsy Discovery reviewer Nathan Albright has to say about And Every Word Is True!
15. Under the Banner of Heaven by Jon Krakauer
If youâre an amateur criminologist whoâs somehow never read Krakauer, youâre in for a real treat. That said, you should steel yourself before starting this one: it centers on two fundamentalist Mormons who murder their sister-in-law and her new baby after allegedly receiving a âremoval revelationâ from God. Parallel to this shudder-inducing story, Krakauer delves into the history of Mormonism and its many controversial tenets, from the predilection for polygamy to the constant communication with God⌠and the dangerous consequences these ideas can have when interpreted by unstable minds.
16. The Innocent Man by John Grisham
John Grishamâs sole contribution to the nonfiction canon is another gripping tale of a wrongly convicted individual, this time for the rape and murder of a young cocktail waitress. While the drug- and alcohol-addicted Ron Williamson was perhaps no role model, Grisham clearly renders how evidence was mishandled and distorted by a desperate police department in order to frame him. As a result, Williamson was sentenced to death in 1988 â but was he able to escape his doomed fate? Youâll have to read The Innocent Man to find out.
17. Billion Dollar Whale by Tom Wright and Bradley Hope
Written by two Wall Street Journal reporters, Billion Dollar Whale snagged a nod from the Pulitzer committee in 2016. It reads, however, as much like a picaresque novel as a piece of business journalism. Jho Low, a Malaysian-born Wharton grad, used his financial savvy to funnel some $4.5 billion in stolen money into his accounts. Those fooled by him included Goldman Sachs execs, Malaysian and a host of celebrities â including Leonardo DiCaprio, whose star turn in The Wolf on Wall Street was partially bankrolled by Low's stolen funds.
18. Columbine by Dave Cullen
Ten years after the 1999 Columbine massacre, Cullen published this extensive volume detailing its before, during, and after. The narrative alternates between the killersâ planning stages and the victimsâ experiences in the aftermath, intercut with brief but horrific scenes of the shooting (and attempted bombing) itself. A truly devastating account of a largely preventable tragedy, Columbine is nonetheless required reading for those who may have forgotten or minimized the events of that day, if only so we can strive harder to prevent more like it.
19. The Poisonerâs Handbook by Deborah Blum
Another good option for people who want to avoid blood and guts (though not the actual act of murder) is this fascinating guide to the early days of forensic toxicology. Blum takes the reader on a journey from 1915 to 1936, beginning with the appointment of New York Cityâs first chief medical examiner, Charles Norris. After teaming up with toxicologist Alexander Gettler, the two go on to prove the truth about various medical mysteries and unusual crimes, from poisoned Prohibition alcohol to accidental carbon monoxide deaths â with Blum explaining the scientific basis for each case along the way.
20. The People Who Eat Darkness by Richard Lloyd Parry
In the early summer of 2000, 21-year-old Lucie Blackman moved from England to Tokyo and began working as a hostess. Just two months later, she disappeared. The Japanese police and British press became involved, and the incident exploded into international speculation â what really happened to Lucie? Parryâs book covers both the peculiar and often poisonous sexual culture of Japan to which Lucie fell prey, as well as the specific phenomenon of young white womenâs criminal cases and the disproportionate attention they receive in the media.
21. Devil in the Grove by Gilbert King
Thurgood Marshall skyrocketed to fame after Brown v. Board of Education. But did you know that just before that, he was involved in an equally controversial case? Devil in the Grove documents how in Florida, 1949, four young black men were accused of sexual assault; one was killed and the other three violently beaten by the sheriff. Undeterred by outside threats, Marshall then took the stand to defend them â marking a turning point for his career and the civil rights movement as a whole.
22. Five Days at Memorial by Sheri Fink
In the ultimate âwhat would you do?â scenario, Five Days at Memorial recalls the events at Memorial Medical Center in the days immediately following Hurricane Katrina. Under incredibly high-pressure circumstances, the decision was made to de-prioritize critically ill patients with Do Not Resuscitate orders â and even to hasten the deaths of those unlikely to survive the evacuation, using high doses of morphine. But this is no tale of heartless sociopaths: instead, itâs one of hardworking professionals faced with a nearly impossible choice, as Fink makes evident through her detailed and sympathetic prose.
23. Party Monster by James St. James
Originally published as Disco Bloodbath, this edgy memoir tells the story of James St. Jamesâs years as a New York club kid â a glitzy time that ultimately ended in, well, a bloodbath. St. Jamesâs friend, Michael Alig, rises to prominence in the club scene, a world of drug-fueled decadence. But when he murders rival drug dealer Angel Melendez, the party stops for good â at least for St. James, who must contend with the knowledge that his friend has become a killer.
24. The Brothers by Masha Gessen
After the Boston Marathon bombing of 2013, which killed five people and grievously injured countless others, the bombers were quickly identified: brothers Dzhokhar and Tamerlan Tsarnaev, who had self-radicalized after immigrating to America. The Brothers, released the day before Dzhokharâs court conviction, reveals both the origins of the Tsarnaevs and the disturbing psychology behind such politically motivated terrorist attacks â how the perpetrators remain utterly convinced, even in the wake of arrest, that theyâve acted righteously.
25. American Heiress by Jeffrey Toobin
In 1974, newspaper heiress Patty Hearst was abducted by the Symbionese Liberation Army. Nineteen months later, she was finally found â not as a kidnapping victim but as a fugitive, wanted for offenses from carjacking to bank robbery. American Heiress dives into the whole history of Hearstâs case, which captured the publicâs imagination from the first reports of her disappearance to her final, spectacular trial. The result is a spellbinding read that combines tightly focused reportage with a birds-eye view of a nation grappling with income inequality and a flawed criminal justice system.
26. Adnanâs Story by Rabia Chaudry
If youâve listened to Serial, you already know the story of Adnan Syed. Shoddily convicted in 1999 for the murder of his ex-girlfriend, he's been serving a life sentence for almost twenty years now. Chaudry, who brought the case to the attention of Serial, has since decided to take matters into her own hands: the result is Adnanâs Story. This book, written from Chaudryâs expert perspective as a lawyer, goes into extraordinary detail about the killing â including new forensic evidence and a suspect who could potentially exonerate Syed.
27. Who Killed These Girls? by Beverly Lowry
Another tragic cold case resurfaces in 2016âs Who Killed These Girls?, which recounts the events surrounding the 1991 Austin yogurt shop murders. Four teenage girls were sexually assaulted, shot, and left to burn after their killer set fire to the frozen yogurt store where they worked. What followed was a shockingly incompetent display by the Austin police, who arrested several teenage boys and coerced them into confessing, only for DNA evidence to prove conclusively otherwise. The true criminalâs identity remains unknown, but Lowry still manages to bring justice to the victims simply by telling their stories.
28. The Blood of Emmett Till by Timothy B. Tyson
The lynching of 14-year-old Emmett Till has long been recognized as a horrific hate crime that catalyzed the American civil rights movement. But in rendering Till a historic symbol, weâve forgotten that he was also just a boy â a boy whose life was stolen from him in an impossibly cruel and undeserved manner. This book delves into the life and death of Emmett Till, potently presenting the aftermath of his lynching as both political and deeply personal.
29. Black Edge by Sheelah Kolhatkar
After a long string of deaths, letâs turn to a non-murderous (yet still morally bankrupt â no pun intended) offense: insider trading! Black Edge details the rise and fall of Steven A. Cohen and his hedge fund group, SAC Capital Advisors, which closed following a massive investigation in 2016. Kolhatkar, herself a former hedge fund analyst, skillfully compiles all essential info while still making Black Edge compulsively readable â similar to Michael Lewisâ financial-disaster smash hit The Big Short. However, idealistic readers beware: just because Cohen was caught, doesnât mean this story has a happy ending.
30. Killers of the Flower Moon by David Grann
The money-motivated murders in this book truly exemplify the darkest depths of human prejudice, jealousy, greed, and evil. In the 1920s, the Osage Native Americans of Oklahoma possessed a wealth of natural oil deposits beneath their land; naturally, they soon found themselves under violent attack from outsiders who wanted the oil for themselves. The death toll reached dozens before serious intervention â from none other than the newly formed Bureau of Investigations. If youâre fascinated by the ugliest hidden pockets of American history and the fledgling days of the FBI, pick up Killers of the Flower Moon.
31. Empire of Sin by Gary Krist
If youâre a fan of vintage glamour and underworld murk Empire of Sin is the book for you. Prepare to be transported to early 20th-century New Orleans, a city at war with itself. Tom Anderson rules the demimonde as the unofficial mayor of âStoryville,â the designated vice district where brothels, dance halls, and gambling dens flourished outside the view of ârespectableâ citizens. His tale is interwoven with the unforgettable stories of musicians, sex workers, mafiosos, and reformers.
32. The Fact of a Body by Alexandria Marzano-Lesnevich
A strikingly personal work from Marzano-Lesnevich (its subtitle reads âa murder and a memoirâ), this book begins with her watching a videotape of Ricky Langley, who was convicted of killing a six-year-old boy in 1992. Overwhelmed by emotion, our author â at that time a young lawyer â is haunted by the case for years⌠until she finally cracks open some old files and starts to analyze what really happened, through the unique lens of her own experience.
33. American Fire by Monica Hesse
When Monica Hesse traveled to Accomack County, Virginia in 2013, she already knew who was on trial for the massive fire-setting spree there: a couple, Charlie Smith and Tonya Bundick. But the Bonnie and Clyde of arson, so to speak, were more than they initially appeared â as Hesse soon discovered through her research. American Fire is the enthralling account of what she found: a âwhydunnitâ of complex, psychosexual motivations that will astound even the most jaded readers.
34. Death in the Air by Kate Winkler Dawson
Fans of The Crown, youâll recognize the inciting incident of this thrillingly intertwined narrative. The year is 1952, and the âGreat Smogâ has settled over London. This was a disastrous pollution event that killed thousands, diseased many more, and provided convenient cover for a serial killer, who lured women to his flat under the fog. Over the course of this book, Dawsom deftly demonstrates how âthe Beast of Rillington Placeâ operated, and how both killers â human and airborne â came to permanently impact English law.
35. Iâll Be Gone in The Dark by Michelle McNamara
One of our personal favorites on this list (and others), Iâll Be Gone in the Dark is a doggedly researched, masterfully crafted work from an author whose work will long outlive her. It describes the various cases of the Visalia Ransacker, the East Area Rapist, and the Original Night Stalker, all of whom McNamara speculates to be one person: the Golden State Killer. Packed to the brim with information, and made even more impressive by the fact that these events occurred 30+ years ago, this book will no doubt be remembered as one of the great true crime feats of the 21st century â and for spurring the arrest of Joseph James DeAngelo, now widely believed to be the Golden State Killer.
36. Bad Blood by John Carreyrou
Bad Blood chronicles one of the most bizarre criminal cases in recent memory, even in the strange land of Silicon Valley. Weâre talking, of course, about Elizabeth Holmes and Theranos: a company hawking super-advanced blood-testing technology, which turned out to be predicated on fraud and lies. Carreyrou, reporting for the Wall Street Journal, was actually the first to expose the technologyâs failure and Holmesâ willful deception of investors and the public. This aptly titled treatment expands on his earlier articles, providing a fascinating glimpse into the Fyre Festival-esque fiasco that was Theranos.
37. Say Nothing by Patrick Radden Keefe
In this book, Keefe recalls a brutal conflict that many have too easily forgotten: the Troubles in Northern Ireland. This deep-rooted political and nationalist conflict came to a head in 1972, when nearly 500 Irish citizens lost their lives â including a single mother of 10, who was abducted and killed by the Irish Republican Army. Against the grim backdrop of these events, Say Nothing homes in on the fates of IRA terrorists Dolours and Marian Price, as well as the devastating combat that took place between other IRA and British Army individuals.
38. The Five by Hallie Rubenhold
There are endless books about Jack the Ripper that speculate on his identity. The Five takes a gratifying new approach by focusing instead on the âcanonical fiveâ women that he killed: Polly, Annie, Elizabeth, Catherine, and Mary-Jane. Rubenhold depicts their lives with great nuance and care, built on a foundation of diligent research and hard-won facts. Most importantly, this book forces the reader to confront their misconceptions and biases about the Ripper and his victims, and sets a new precedent for whose stories ought to be told.
39. The Feather Thief by Kirk Wallace Johnson
Now for a dose of weird and wacky. The Feather Thief recounts the case of Edwin Rist, a 20-year-old flautist who robbed the British Museum of Natural History in 2009. But his mark wasnât precious heirlooms, at least not of the conventional sort â Rist was after the rare bird skins housed in the museum, and ended up getting away with hundreds of specimens. Still, what did he want with Victorian-era feathers? Johnsonâs book intriguingly tackles this highly unusual heist â and, in tandem, the study of ornithology and the secret world of âfly-tying.â
40. Furious Hours by Casey Cep
Nearing the end of our list, weâre coming slightly full-circle with Furious Hours. This book follows Harper Lee, who helped Truman Capote research In Cold Blood, in her attempts to complete her own groundbreaking true crime book. The case in question was actually quite interesting: a rural preacher who killed five of his family members, a vigilante relative who then killed him, and the same lawyer who briefly represented them both. However, classic literature enthusiasts will be much more engrossed by the story of Leeâs writing, her relationship with Capote, and her struggles to live up to expectations after the explosion of To Kill a Mockingbird.
41. American Predator by Maureen Callahan
Weâve covered the most prolific and the most unusual serial killers, but what about the most meticulous? According to Maureen Callahan, that title goes to Israel Keyes. His modus operandi was to bury âkill kitsâ around the United States, and use them on victims at seemingly random times⌠over the course of 14 years. In other words, this was no typical messy criminal; this was a calculating monster who killed for fun and knew exactly how to elude the authorities. American Predator is a singular rendition of this cold-blooded killer, brilliantly scripted by Callahan and impossible to forget.Â
42. The Man Who Played With Fire by Jan Stocklassa
Stieg Larsson is world-renowned for his Millennium trilogy starring Lisbeth Salander. Yet the late author was working on something even bigger before his untimely death: a no-holds-barred investigation of the Swedish prime ministerâs assassination in 1986. Years later, journalist Jan Stocklassa took up his mantle and delved back into the case, which Larsson had linked to the far-right activities. Stocklassaâs exciting discoveries in this new book prove him just as worthy a detective as Larsson, and definitely one to watch as he continues putting the pieces together.
43. Catch and Kill by Ronan Farrow
Here we have the much-anticipated Catch and Kill â Ronan Farrowâs tell-all account of his years chasing Harvey Weinstein, and the arduous process of publishing the movement-sparking article about him. (The bookâs title refers to the media practice of buying a story just to bury it, which Weinstein employed to prevent NBC coverage of his crimes.) In any case, Farrow â no stranger to morally gray celebrities â here goes after Weinstein with the tenacity of a bloodhound, uncovering even more shocking revelations and turning Catch and Kill into a veritable real-life thriller. Yet he still manages to keep the main focus on what really matters: the women involved, their stories, and the justice they deserve.
44. The Red Parts by Maggie Nelson
Four years before Maggie Nelson was born, her aunt was murdered by the Ypsilanti Ripper, a Michigan serial killer targeting teen and college-aged girls. At least, thatâs what everyone assumed, although Jane Mixerâs death was never actually solved. Decades later, Nelson, now an award-winning poet, is working on a book about her aunt â right when a DNA match points to another suspect for her death. Mixing memoir and reportage, The Red Parts excavates a remarkable case with a poetâs poignancy and grace.
45. Lost Girls by Robert Kolker
Written with sensitivity and rigor, Lost Girls shines a light on five sex workers murdered by the Long Island serial killer â a fiend who remains at large today. Disregarded by law enforcement and the media alike, these women find a voice through Kolkerâs reportage, which brings their intelligence, heart, and humanity to the forefront. With a narrative voice that reads less âthrillerâ than âliterary fiction,â this is the perfect book for readers who prefer subtle characterization to cheap thrills.
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Can't get enough of suspicious figures and spectacular solves? Check out this list of our 50 best suspense books, or if you're in the mood for something milder, our essential guide to cozy mysteries.