Jabez: The Rise and Fall of a Victorian Rogue

Jabez: The Rise and Fall of a Victorian Rogue

by David Mc Kie (Author)

Synopsis

Jabez, as he was universally known, was a business man, philanthropist, politician, temperance campaigner and charmer. He was also an astonishing scoundrel - a liar, adulterer and cheat - who perpetrated the most destructive fraud of the nineteenth century. When the Liberator building society collapsed under the weight of its own extravagant malpractice, thousands of people were left defrauded and destitute. Jabez, the Liberator's moving spirit, immediately took flight to Argentina, accompanied (scandalously) by a female ward half his age. Eventually, a determined Scotland Yard detective caught up withJabez, and kidnapped him on a high-speed train across South America from whence he was hauled back to justice. David McKie's account of the rise and fall of this charismatic swindler brings the man and the times trumpeting to life.McKie describes the massive charm offensives, the growth and collapse of the vast Jabez empire, his scandalous escape and dramatic extradition, and the sensational show trail that followed.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 288
Edition: Main
Publisher: Atlantic Books
Published: 10 Feb 2005

ISBN 10: 1843541319
ISBN 13: 9781843541318
Book Overview: 'An irresistible tale of greed and gullibility. Imagine the escapades of Robert Maxwell, Jeffrey Archer and Ronnie Biggs all re-written as a Victorian novel, and you have the true story of Jabez Spencer Balfour MP' (Francis Wheen)

Media Reviews
'A fair-minded, well-researched and impressively written biography.' Andrew Roberts, Sunday Telegraph; 'Jabez opens like a detective story and the breathless pace of David McKie's biography barely lets up for the next 300 pages... A page-turning thriller.' Jon Barnes, Times Literary Supplement; 'A fast-moving thriller, full of action, colour and (at times) laughter... Riveting.' Jonathan Aitken, New Statesman; 'A tight and engaging yarn.' Simon Garfield, Financial Times; 'An entertaining, original and beautifully written book.' Simon Heffer, Daily Mail
Author Bio
David McKie joined the Guardian in 1965. He was deputy editor from 1975 to 1984 and now writes the 'Elsewhere' and 'Smallweed' columns for the paper.