There’s magic in opening a book and finding yourself not just in a story but in another era. (I’ve long suspected that the appeal of a trip to St. Mary’s Mead isn’t just Miss Marple but the historical atmosphere of an English village in 1930).

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Historical mysteries offer something beyond puzzle-solving—they provide passage to bygone eras. Readers can smell the coal smoke, see the swing of a flapper’s pearls as she dances the Charleston, and feel the weight of social conventions.

What makes a historical mystery special isn’t just accurate research—though that’s essential—but the author’s ability to conjure atmosphere, to drop sly references to real historical figures and events, and yes, to dress their characters in period-perfect clothes (a W…

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