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Summary and Reviews of A Gentleman and a Thief by Dean Jobb

A Gentleman and a Thief by Dean Jobb

A Gentleman and a Thief

The Daring Jewel Heists of a Jazz Age Rogue

by Dean Jobb
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  • Jun 25, 2024, 448 pages
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About This Book

Book Summary

In this captivating Jazz Age true crime about "the greatest jewel thief who ever lived" (Life Magazine), Arthur Barry, who charmed celebrities and millionaires while simultaneously planning and executing the most audacious and lucrative heists of the 1920s. 

A skilled con artist and one of the most successful burglars in history, Arthur Barry was adept at slipping in and out of bedrooms undetected, even when his victims slept only inches away. He became a folk hero, a gentleman bandit touted in the press as the "Prince of Thieves" and an "Aristocrat of Crime." Think Cary Grant in To Catch a Thief. In a span of seven years, Barry stole pearls, diamonds, and other precious gems worth almost $60 million today. Among his many victims were a Rockefeller, an heiress to the Woolworth Department Store fortune, an oil magnate, Wall Street bigwigs, a top executive of automotive giant General Motors, and a famous polo player. He befriended the Prince of Wales, Harry Houdini, and other luminaries. The rollicking, caper-filled rise and dramatic downfall of this master thief is a high-speed ride told in stylish prose.

A Gentleman and a Thief is also a love story. Barry confessed to dozens of burglaries to protect his wife, Anna Blake (and was the prime suspect in scores of others on Long Island and across Westchester County). Sentenced to a twenty-five-year term, he staged a dramatic prison break—triggering a bloody inmates' riot—when Anna became seriously ill, so they could be together for a few more years as fugitives. Page-turning, escapist, and sparkling with insight into the allure of gemstones and our fascination with well-planned heists and the suave, clever criminals who pull them off, A Gentleman and a Thief is perfect for true crime fans who relish the exploits of con artists and high-class crooks.

PROLOGUE
Prince Charming
Long Island and Manhattan • 1924

A man in a tuxedo and winged collar navigated a room filled with black-clad men and elegant women in Parisian gowns, sparkling with jewels. He docked alongside a group of guests who had formed a cordon around a punch bowl. Someone offered him a drink, and as names were exchanged the newcomer identified himself as Gibson. Dr. Gibson. He had thick black hair, blue eyes, and the chiseled good looks of the matinee idols seen—but not yet heard—in the movie houses. Some guests may have done a double take as he passed; he was a dead ringer for the British actor Ronald Colman, who had been catapulted to Hollywood stardom the previous year in The White Sister, starring opposite silent-era legend Lillian Gish.

One of the punch bowl's defenders was short and slim, with sandy hair, and needed no introduction. His boyish face was tilted slightly downward, betraying his shyness, and his puppy-dog eyes had been staring out from ...

Please be aware that this discussion guide will contain spoilers!
  1. Was Barry a born criminal, or do you think circumstances forced him into a life of crime?
  2. What skills and methods made him such a successful jewel thief?
  3. "I know he's terrible," said one socialite Barry robbed, "but isn't he charming?" What were some of the characteristics that made him so likeable?
  4. Were you on Barry's side? If so, why do we root for polite, gentlemanly crooks like Barry?
  5. Barry prided himself on stealing only from the rich and never resorting to violence during robberies. Do you think this lessens the seriousness of his crimes?
  6. "It was that kind of time. Why not live well?" Barry said of his free-spending gambler's lifestyle. In what ways was he a product of the Roaring Twenties?
  7. Why was it so hard for the police and private...
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Reviews

BookBrowse Review

BookBrowse

In the Roaring Twenties—an era known for its flash and glamour as well as its gangsters and bootleggers—Arthur Barry used a combination of charm, cool-headedness, and shrewd observational skills to become one of America's most infamous jewel thieves. In A Gentleman and a Thief, Dean Jobb shares the stranger-than-fiction story of a young boy from Massachusetts who became a master cat burglar, took an English monarch on a tour of NYC, stole millions of dollars in jewels, and gave it all up for love.

To set the stage for Barry's crimes, Jobb includes a wealth of information about the culture of the 1920s. NYC's role in the diamond industry, in particular, emphasizes the extravagance of the decade, which provided jewel thieves like Barry a wide range of victims from whom to choose. Jobb also incorporates background about the various investigators who worked to capture Barry and looks at the role of the media, particularly newspapers, in the sensationalism of crime and how false headlines and unfounded tips made criminal investigations harder to solve...continued

Full Review Members Only (899 words)

(Reviewed by Jordan Lynch).

Media Reviews

BookPage
Breezily told. Barry's escapades have elements of our favorite fictional thieves and con men.

Booklist
Jobb brings [Arthur Barry] vividly to life in this topflight true crime narrative… What sets Jobb apart is the way he approaches his subjects with perception and compassion. This belongs in every library's true crime section for every reader of this ever-growing genre.

Kirkus Reviews
An entertaining history of a criminal mastermind… A rousing tale of true crime that elicits sympathy for both victims and perpetrator.

Publishers Weekly (starred review)
A top-shelf work of true crime… Jobb tells Barry's tale with both rigor and pathos, painting a tender portrait of a crook who was never fearsome. This is liable to steal readers' hearts.

Author Blurb Lindsey Fitzharris, New York Times bestselling author of The Facemaker
This captivating tale will charm its way into your affections like the charismatic rogue at its heart. A Gentleman and a Thief is the glittering jewel of its genre. Once more, Dean Jobb proves he's a master storyteller.

Author Blurb Michael Cannell, author of A Brotherhood Betrayed and Incendiary
Dean Jobb gives us a real-life character like no other, an audacious jewel thief working the society parlors of Jazz Age New York. Here is a book to put alongside the other greats of narrative non-fiction, as cinematic and vivid as any in the catalog of true crime storytelling.

Author Blurb Michael Finkel, New York Times bestselling author of The Art Thief and The Stranger in the Woods
An enthrallingly propulsive, unpredictably twisty biography of one of the most fascinating criminals of the 20th Century. Dean Jobb's immersive writing and in-depth research brings this startling true story to life. I was hooked from the very first heist.

Reader Reviews

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Beyond the Book



The Heist of the Century: The Antwerp Diamond Heist

Exterior of Antwerp World Diamond CentreIt's been called the heist of the century, despite happening only three years after the turn of the millennium. At the start of the business day on February 17, 2003, police were called to the Antwerp World Diamond Centre (AWDC) by frantic jewel traders claiming their highly secure vault had been breached. Investigators found the vault open and safe deposit boxes, cash, and priceless jewels scattered across the floor. In striking similarity to the exploits of Arthur Barry, the central figure of Dean Jobb's A Gentleman and a Thief, the thieves who broke into the AWDC had seemingly pulled off an impossible crime and walked away with millions of dollars.

Antwerp, Belgium has been the capital of the world's diamond trade since ...

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Read-Alikes

Read-Alikes Full readalike results are for members only

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