Debra Komar: 5 books

Book cover of The Bastard of Fort Stikine

The Bastard of Fort Stikine

The Hudson's Bay Company and the Murder of John McLoughlin, Jr.

by Debra Komar
Language: English
Release Date: May 5, 2015

Winner, Canadian Authors Award for Canadian History, Jeanne Clarke Memorial Local History Award, and Prince Edward Island Book Award for Non-Fiction Is it possible to reach back in time and solve an unsolved murder, more than 170 years after it was committed? Just after midnight on April...
Book cover of The Ballad of Jacob Peck
by Debra Komar
Language: English
Release Date: April 9, 2013

On a frigid February evening in 1805, Amos Babcock brutally murdered Mercy Hall. Believing that he was being instructed by God, Babcock stabbed and disembowelled his own sister, before dumping her lifeless body in a rural New Brunswick snowbank. The Ballad of Jacob Peck is the tragic and fascinating...
Book cover of Black River Road

Black River Road

An Unthinkable Crime, an Unlikely Suspect, and the Question of Character

by Debra Komar
Language: English
Release Date: September 6, 2016

Shortlisted, Arthur Ellis Best Non-Fiction Crime Book Award In 1869, in the woods just outside of the bustling port city of Saint John, a group of teenaged berry pickers discovered several badly decomposed bodies. The authorities suspected foul play, but the identities of the victims were as...
Book cover of The Lynching of Peter Wheeler
by Debra Komar
Language: English
Release Date: March 25, 2014

At 2:21 am on September 8, 1896, authorities in Nova Scotia killed an innocent man. Peter Wheeler — a "coloured" man accused of murdering a white girl — was strung up with a slipknot noose. The hanging was state-sanctioned but it was a lynching all the same. Now, a re-examination of...
Book cover of The Court of Better Fiction

The Court of Better Fiction

Three Trials, Two Executions, and Arctic Sovereignty

by Debra Komar
Language: English
Release Date: March 16, 2019

In its rush to establish dominion over the North, Canada executed two innocent Inuit. In 1921, the RCMP arrested two Inuit males suspected of killing their uncle. While in custody, one of the accused allegedly killed a police officer and a Hudson's Bay Company trader. The Canadian government...
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