Some murders dominate headlines for decades. Others disappear almost overnight.Between the 1940s and the late 1980s, hundreds of thousands of Americans were murdered-and nearly a third of those cases were never solved. Forgotten Killers: Crimes That Vanished From the Headlines resurrects twelve of those lost stories, examining the victims, the investigations that failed them, and the systems that allowed their deaths to fade into obscurity.Through meticulous research and vivid narrative reconstruction, R.M. Cochran takes readers into small towns, decaying cities, and forgotten neighborhoods where ordinary people-secretaries, janitors, babysitters, artists-were killed and quietly left behind. These were not crimes that inspired task forces or national outrage. They were cases buried by prejudice, underfunded police departments, media indifference, and a justice system that quietly decided certain lives mattered less.This is not a book about sensational killers or easy answers. It is a meditation on memory, inequality, and the human cost of unsolved violence. Each chapter restores dignity to victims whose names were nearly erased-and asks a haunting question: Who decides which crimes are worth remembering?Dark, compassionate, and deeply unsettling, Forgotten Killers is essential reading for fans of narrative true crime, historical injustice, and cold cases that still demand to be seen.