Praise for BLACK DAHLIA “A meticulous and thorough retelling — five years in the making — that resists the sensationalism of the infamous crime to restore dignity back to this young woman’s image.” —The Los Angeles Times "Prolific and insightful." —Town & Country “When “In Cold Blood,” Truman Capote’s “nonfiction novel” about the slaying of a family in rural Kansas, came out in 1966, British author Rebecca West called it “a grave and reverend book.” William J. Mann’s “Black Dahlia” deserves the same compliment.” —The Washington Post “[An] impressively researched analysis.” —Wall Street Journal “Mann’s effort stands apart from the overlong run of books about the case.” —The Atlantic "I've read nearly all the Black Dahlia books and this is by far the most balanced, thoughtful and sweeping one and, thankfully, it clears up countless myths and untruths about Elizabeth Short and restores her to the status of a real person, a young woman much loved by friends and family." —Megan Abbott, author of El Dorado Drive "A meticulous study of an infamous murder, and a debunking of its conspiracy theories. . . . A sober, well-researched study of a case whose notoriety obscured its subject." —Kirkus Reviews (starred review) “The empathetic Mann does an excellent job of humanizing Short, the 22-year-old murder victim, in the context of postwar Los Angeles... Mann’s Black Dahlia book may have just replaced John Gilmore’s nonfiction volume Severed and James Ellroy’s fictionalized take The Black Dahlia in the true crime canon.” —Library Journal (starred review) “A meticulous and humane reconsideration of one of America’s most sensationalized unsolved murders. . . . Mann sets out to restore complexity and dignity to a woman long reduced to tabloid caricature. . . . For true crime devotees and Black Dahlia obsessives, this is a must.”—Publishers Weekly (starred review) “Impeccable . . . [Mann] draws from all manner of official records, interviews with people who personally knew the original case investigators and suspects, contemporary news reports, and previously published theories. He applies rigorous logic and common sense to the mountain of evidence and theories, arriving at a conclusion that sounds very much like it might be what actually happened.” —Booklist "Illuminating and captivating . . . Readers get a clearer picture of WHO Elizabeth was instead of WHAT HAPPENED to her…she has been portrayed as a Hollywood starlet, a “loose” woman . . . Mann breaks down those misconceptions bit by bit.” —Bargain Sleuth Reviews “If a better understanding of postwar America comes with sifting through a notorious but misunderstood cold case, I’m happy to go along for the ride.” —LitHub “True crime fans will find BLACK DAHLIA to be a comprehensive and, perhaps, definitive guide to one of America’s most enduring mysteries.” —BookPage "Mann’s outstanding chronicle of the sordid case." —Washington Independent Review of Books "A valuable corrective to the cottage industry of speculative theories... an attempt to rediscover the real Elizabeth Short and to offer a portrait of a woman who was actually nothing like the noirish antiheroine that she became in the public imagination." —Quillette