The Murder of George Reeves is a gripping work of narrative nonfiction that reopens one of Hollywood’s most enduring and unsettling mysteries. In June 1959, George Reeves, beloved star of the television series Adventures of Superman, was found dead in his Beverly Hills home. The official ruling was suicide. The case was closed quickly. But almost from the beginning, the explanation failed to convince those closest to him and many who would later examine the evidence. This book goes beyond headlines and legend to tell the full story of the man behind the cape. It traces Reeves’s journey from his Midwestern childhood to the rigid studio system of classic Hollywood, through wartime service, stalled film ambitions, and finally the unexpected fame that television brought him. Superman made Reeves a household name, but it also confined him, reshaping his identity and narrowing his future in an industry that valued image over complexity. Drawing on firsthand accounts, historical records, and cultural analysis, this book reconstructs the final night of Reeves’s life and the investigation that followed. It examines the rushed coroner’s verdict, inconsistencies in witness statements, missing or overlooked evidence, and the broader Hollywood power structures that shaped how scandals were managed in the 1950s. The role of influential figures, the silence of institutions, and the machinery of public image are explored with care and restraint, allowing readers to understand why doubt has persisted for decades. At the heart of this story is not just a question of how George Reeves died, but why his death was so quickly explained and quietly set aside. Friends, co-stars, and family members struggled to reconcile the official narrative with the man they knew, while later generations would revisit his story through films, media, and the myth of the so-called Superman curse. This book separates myth from reality, revealing how easily human lives are transformed into symbols and how those symbols can obscure uncomfortable truths. The Murder of George Reeves is not a sensational true-crime exposé. It is a thoughtful, deeply researched biography and cultural investigation that challenges easy conclusions. It asks readers to consider the cost of fame, the power of Hollywood’s unspoken rules, and the difference between closure and truth. Above all, it restores George Reeves to his humanity, honoring him not as a legend or a mystery alone, but as a man whose life and death deserve careful understanding. For readers interested in Hollywood history, unsolved cases, media power, and the fragile line between public image and private reality, this book offers a compelling and unforgettable exploration of a story that refuses to stay buried.