Jess Cannon is the fiction pseudonym of Jessica Goudeau. She spends her days writing award-winning journalism and her nights plotting fictional murders. She lives with her family and an irascible blue heeler in Austin, Texas, where her funky community is a constant source of joy (and writing material). She has a PhD in literature from the University of Texas, teaches fiction and nonfiction at Wilkes University, and has written for The New York Times, The Atlantic, The Washington Post, and Teen Vogue, among others. She also co-hosts “The Beautiful and Banned” podcast with Christine Renee Miller.
Her first cozy mystery, A Zoom with a View, released on May 5 with Dutton. It’s the first of the Blue Oak series featuring Leo, a failed academic who moves home to her quirky hometown and keeps stumbling over dead bodies. Kirkus Reviews wrote, “Nothing—and no one—is quite what they seem… a smart, funny mystery with twists and turns to spare” and The Gloss Book Club raved, “This novel delivers a sharp, entertaining mystery wrapped in small-town drama… a fresh, snarky, and thoroughly engaging read.” #1 NYT-bestseller Ali Hazelwood said: “Jess Cannon has delivered a heartfelt, hilarious read that’s perfect for the beach. A Zoom with a View is quirky, witty, plotty, and full of small-town charm. A recovering academic returning to her small Texas town and investigating a murder while navigating her own love triangle? This book was written for me, and it’s as delightful as the premise promises! A thoroughly enjoyable, wickedly twisty, heartwarmingly funny debut!” The second book in the series, Finnegan’s Not Awake, releases in spring 2027.
As Jessica Goudeau, her first two narrative nonfiction books, After the Last Border: Two Families and the Story of Refuge in America (Viking, 2020) and We Were Illegal: Uncovering a Texas Family’s Mythmaking and Migration (Viking, 2024), received many accolades, including the J. Anthony Lukas Book Prize, a Christopher Award, the Writers League of Texas Nonfiction Book Prize, and being named a finalist for the LA Times Biography Book Prize; they were both New York Times’ Editors’ Choice books.
