On the stroke of midnight on January 17, 1920, the 18th Amendment to the Constitution went into effect across the United States. From that moment on, it was illegal to buy or sell alcoholic drinks of any kind (unless one had special medical or religious permission—exceptions that were exploited regularly). The Act's proponents hoped that it would reduce crime and poverty. It did not. In fact, quite infamously, the very opposite happened.

Thanks in part to Prohibition, which lasted from 1920 until the 18th Amendment's official repeal in 1933, the Roaring Twenties was a decade filled with discarded inhibitions and romanticized crime. Gangsters like Al Capone built their fortunes on supplying illegal liquor and were willing to go to extreme, violent lengths to protect their empires. The law had an outsized impact on the poor and working class, who no longer had reliable access to good-quality drinks and were sometimes disabled or even killed by the toxic ingredients in unregulated bootleg liquor.

Prohibition was an unmitigated failure—not even the congressmen who helped craft the law could be bothered to hide the fact that they were flouting it—and to this day, the 18th Amendment remains the only constitutional amendment to have ever been repealed. Whether you want to know more about the people who helped define the period, the social factors that led to its rise and demise, or its lingering effects on American culture, these listens are just the thing.

Nonfiction about the Prohibition Era

Last Call
American Dreamer: Who Was Jay Gatsby?
Liberated Spirits
Prohibition - Closing Time | 1 (Ad-free)
Bubble in the Sun
Nothing but the Night
Bonnie and Clyde


Fiction set in the Prohibition Era

The Wettest County in the World, or Lawless
The Orchid Hour
The Chosen and the Beautiful
The Mayor of Maxwell Street
Dollface
Dead Dead Girls
Wild Women and the Blues

Eileen Gonzalez is a freelance writer from Connecticut. She has a Master's degree in communications and years of experience writing about pop culture. She contributes to Book Riot and Foreword Reviews.