** Revised & updated edition coming in Fall 2022 from Nimbus Publishing **
One of the darkest events in Canadian history is replete with the drama of war, politics, and untold human suffering. Starting in 1755, 10,000 people of French ancestry were expelled from their homes along Canada's east coast by a tyrannical British governor with the complicity of American sympathizers. While some Acadians returned home to try to evade capture and forge a living, others made their way to the Spanish colony of Louisiana, where they farmed and fished and began the vibrant Cajun culture that is renowned around the world.
"Jobb's true crime stories are not to be missed" – CrimeReads
I specialize in true crime and I'm drawn to overlooked or forgotten stories. My new book, A Gentleman and a Thief, coming in June 2024, tells the incredible story of Arthur Barry, one of the world’s most successful jewel thieves, who charmed the elite of 1920s New York, brazenly swiped gems worth millions of dollars from their posh country estates, and outfoxed the police and private detectives on his trail.
My previous books include The Case of the Murderous Dr. Cream, winner of the inaugural CrimeCon CLUE Award for Best True Crime Book of 2021 and longlisted for the Andrew Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Nonfiction. It recreates Scotland Yard's hunt for a Victorian Era serial killer who murdered at least ten people in Britain, the U.S. and Canada. Empire of Deception, the rollicking tale of Chicago con man Leo Koretz and his amazing 1920s oil swindle, was the Chicago Writers Association's Nonfiction Book of the Year. Esquire proclaimed it one of the best biographies of all time.
I'm also the author of The Acadian Saga: A People's Story of Exile and Triumph, which chronicles the expulsion of French-speaking Acadians from Eastern Canada more than two centuries ago and the founding of Louisiana’s Cajun culture.
My books have won the Crime Writers of Canada Award for best true crime book and I have been a finalist for the Hilary Weston Writers' Trust Prize, Canada's top award for nonfiction.
My true crime column "Stranger Than Fiction" appears in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine and I write book reviews and features for The Irish Times,CrimeReads, the Washington Independent Review of Books and other major publications. I'm a professor at the University of King’s College in Halifax and teach in the King's MFA in Creative Nonfiction program.
This is a historical account of the brutal exiling of the Acadian people of early Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, and Prince Edward Island by the British in 1755. The horrors which these gentle farmers who were some of Canada’s first citizens went through was nothing less than genocide orchestrated by English overlords.
They displaced the Acadians to different locations across the globe, yet today still hold the same language and traditions and even gather to celebrate their ethnicity and resilience. One issue I had with this telling was there was not enough emphasis on the role of the French government, the Catholic priests and a group of hotheads that forced the British hand in this displacement.
I would have liked this more if the bias and sensationalism had been less: la grande derangement is an example of a disapora/genocide (and where that line blurs) and doesn't need "hyping". It's one of the problems I have with non-fiction - it should be dispassionate (unless the reporter is closely linked with the events) and there are more and more cases of it not being so.
Engaging, dramatic prose interspersed with real life accounts of everyday heroes and villains, a must read for anyone discovering their Acadian roots. At some point, you may even cry at the pain experienced by this people and so little known.
I knew a little bit about the deportations of the Acadians but I had a lot of questions. This book answered those questions and so much more. It is a fascinating, comprehensive account of this sad event.