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Deborah Holt Larkin

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Deborah Holt Larkin

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Born
Pasadena, California
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October 2022


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Deborah Holt Larkin I was ten years old when Olga Duncan, a young pregnant nurse, vanished from her Santa Barbara apartment one night in 1958. The discovery of her brutal…moreI was ten years old when Olga Duncan, a young pregnant nurse, vanished from her Santa Barbara apartment one night in 1958. The discovery of her brutally-beaten body a month later in a shallow grave on a lonely road fed my worst fears and scariest nightmares. I was thunderstruck. The mystery of what happened to Olga scared yet fascinated me, and ignited my life-long interest in true crime stories--not because I like blood and violence, but because of my own feelings of vulnerability.

My father was a reporter for the local newspaper when Olga disappeared. He covered the brutal crime from beginning to end. Daddy had no filter and his nightly spellbinding stories told around our dinning room table brought the bizarre characters involved in Olga's murder to life for me. When the sensational trial of her killers began, newspaper reporters from all over the country descended on our small town. Olga's story has haunted me my entire life.








































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Average rating: 4.12 · 844 ratings · 127 reviews · 2 distinct worksSimilar authors
A Lovely Girl: The Tragedy ...

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Publisher's Weekly Starred Review

A Lovely Girl: The Tragedy of Olga Duncan & the Trial of California’s Most Notorious Killer

Deborah Holt Larkin. Pegasus Crime,

In this excellent debut, educator Larkin revisits the case of Elizabeth Duncan, who was convicted of the 1958 murder of her daughter-in-law and was the last woman to be executed in California before the Supreme Court suspended the death penalty in 1972. Larkin, who was 10 Read more of this blog post »
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Published on April 22, 2023 14:24
Quotes by Deborah Holt Larkin  (?)
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“The door at the back of Ventura Superior Courtroom One swung open, and a smiling, confident Elizabeth Duncan sashayed in like she owned the place. Her grand entrance was hindered only by the fact that she was cuffed to a deputy sheriff. Mrs. Duncan nodded and raised her finger tips to a few familiar faces in the press section that she'd come to know during the week-long jury selection process.

Reporters and photographers swarmed. 'How about a few pictures before we start?' one newsman called out. Mrs.'s Duncan's dapper little attorney, S. Ward Sullivan, nodded his permission. The deputy unfastened the cuffs. Mrs. Duncan stood next to her chair at the defense table and rubbed her wrist before turning toward reporters. 'Do you like my new outfit?' she asked as she fluffed the skirt of her two-piece, black and white dress. 'Frank bought it for me.' Flashbulbs popped.”
Deborah Holt Larkin, A Lovely Girl: The Tragedy of Olga Duncan and the Trial of One of California's Most Notorious Killers

“When I look back, Elizabeth Duncan's trial is linked inextricably in my mind to the sound of my father's voice--his dramatic, profanity-laced, sometimes humorous stories about witness testimony and crazy antics in the courtroom. Stories of blackmail, a Salvation Army man and a phony annulment, too many husbands to count, and Mrs. Duncan breathing fire to the end, often told in snatches between more chaotic attempts at home repair.

I read every work of his newspaper articles, and I scrutinized the front page photos of all the trial participants. But his nightly accounts brought the bizarre and brutal characters to life around our dining room table. Daddy had no filter. I hung on every detail of his spellbinding tales, and although I'd never met any of these people, I knew them all very well.”
Deborah Holt Larkin, A Lovely Girl: The Tragedy of Olga Duncan and the Trial of One of California's Most Notorious Killers

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“The door at the back of Ventura Superior Courtroom One swung open, and a smiling, confident Elizabeth Duncan sashayed in like she owned the place. Her grand entrance was hindered only by the fact that she was cuffed to a deputy sheriff. Mrs. Duncan nodded and raised her finger tips to a few familiar faces in the press section that she'd come to know during the week-long jury selection process.

Reporters and photographers swarmed. 'How about a few pictures before we start?' one newsman called out. Mrs.'s Duncan's dapper little attorney, S. Ward Sullivan, nodded his permission. The deputy unfastened the cuffs. Mrs. Duncan stood next to her chair at the defense table and rubbed her wrist before turning toward reporters. 'Do you like my new outfit?' she asked as she fluffed the skirt of her two-piece, black and white dress. 'Frank bought it for me.' Flashbulbs popped.”
Deborah Holt Larkin, A Lovely Girl: The Tragedy of Olga Duncan and the Trial of One of California's Most Notorious Killers

“When I look back, Elizabeth Duncan's trial is linked inextricably in my mind to the sound of my father's voice--his dramatic, profanity-laced, sometimes humorous stories about witness testimony and crazy antics in the courtroom. Stories of blackmail, a Salvation Army man and a phony annulment, too many husbands to count, and Mrs. Duncan breathing fire to the end, often told in snatches between more chaotic attempts at home repair.

I read every work of his newspaper articles, and I scrutinized the front page photos of all the trial participants. But his nightly accounts brought the bizarre and brutal characters to life around our dining room table. Daddy had no filter. I hung on every detail of his spellbinding tales, and although I'd never met any of these people, I knew them all very well.”
Deborah Holt Larkin, A Lovely Girl: The Tragedy of Olga Duncan and the Trial of One of California's Most Notorious Killers

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