Our cultural obsession with true crime is easy to understand. Mysteries are inherently intriguing and the genre churns out an endless supply, from unsolved murders and cold cases to the psychological riddles behind why some people join cults, become serial killers, or muster up the brazen confidence of a scam artist. Layer in that real-life element of “How would I have handled this situation differently?” and it’s no wonder we’re hooked.

And yet, as any self-aware true crime fan will tell you, the genre has some problematic tendencies. These include major ethical lapses such as glamorizing perpetrators, centering dead white women and girls at the expense of other cases and communities, and salacious reporting that doesn’t incorporate the perspectives or even consent of the families at the center of real crimes. And then there are more practical matters, like the sheer volume of true crime podcasts and docuseries, many of which rehash the same cases, sometimes over and over (and over).

Grappling with this tension is a necessity that will inform the next evolution of true crime as a genre, but the most interesting work in this area is being led by another group altogether: novelists. Over the past couple of years, we’ve seen a fascinating rise in fiction that tackles our cultural obsession with true crime, from mysteries and thrillers to historical and literary fiction. In audio, form meets meaning thanks to talented multi-casts and producers, and the stories resonate with the immediacy of the medium we’ve come to rely on for our true crime fix. The verdict is in: Fiction is the new true crime.

I Have Some Questions for You
Bright Young Women
Song of the Northwoods
Penance
Say Her Name
With a Kiss We Die
All Good People Here
None of This Is True
The Fraud