There’s something especially enthralling about true crime from the annals of history. When deeply researched and told against the social, cultural, and investigative backdrops of their eras, these stories offer a fascinating glimpse into the past while giving important context to criminal justice today. Another benefit is that, unlike more recent cases, historical true crime is less likely to involve subjects and communities who are still grappling with fresh trauma and active investigations that could be complicated by a contemporary telling. With the perspective only time can bring, these listens blend the scholarship of historical nonfiction with the undeniably engrossing appeal of true crime, which makes them perfect for anyone seeking a complex yet captivating deep dive.

Agatha Christie and the Dandelion Poisoner
Chaos
The Devil in the White City
Manhunt
American Caliph
Better to Have Gone
Solving the Black Dahlia
Diamond Doris
From a Whisper to a Rallying Cry
The Ghosts of Eden Park
The MLK Tapes
Fiasco: Vigilante
Say Nothing
The Invention of Murder
Hannah Mary Tabbs and the Disembodied Torso
The Trial of Lizzie Borden
We Keep the Dead Close
Buried Bones - a historical true crime podcast with Kate Winkler Dawson and Paul Holes
Killers of the Flower Moon

A freelance librarian, Sarah S. Davis, MFA, MLIS, writes about books on Book Riot, Electric Literature, PsychCentral, and others. She is the blogger behind Broke by Books and, under the pen name Minerva Snow, has published Finding My Voice, a work of cat fiction for adults.