A Lovely Girl

The book tells a true story of intrigue, murder, and eccentricity set against the backdrop of iconic 1950s small town California family life. Filled with dark humor and bumbling killers, this sometimes heartbreaking, sometimes comical, and entirely gripping story of a scandalous 1958 murder case alternates chapters of a true crime procedural with a poignant, coming-of-age memoir told in the authentically narrated ten-year-old voice of author Deborah Holt Larkin.  

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About the Author

Deborah Holt Larkin is uniquely qualified to tell this captivating yet horrifying crime story. From a front row seat in her family’s living room, she lived the fear and disbelief that gripped her hometown in 1958.

Larkin holds a bachelor’s degree in American History and Literature from the University of California at Davis, and she studied creative writing at the University of California at San Diego. She has a master’s degree in the Education of Exceptional Children from San Francisco State University.

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In her own words…

(the author’s inspiration to write the story)

My life-long interest in true crime stories began in 1958 when Olga Duncan vanished from her Santa Barbara apartment in the middle of the night. At the time, I was a passionate Dragnet and Nancy Drew fan. But when Olga’s brutally-beaten body was discovered a month later in a shallow grave on a lonely road near my home town, my focus shifted to the real-life mystery. I had a constant source of information from my father’s newspaper articles about the murder and his never-ending monologue around the house detailing the bizarre Ma Duncan case. I became obsessed with the true crime story. My mother tried to rein Daddy in with an occasional, “Shhh, you’re scaring the girls, Bob,” but he had few boundaries when it came to the news of the world. I hung on his every word because I wanted to understand about evil people and how to avoid them.

To me, this story is inextricably linked to a more innocent, unsophisticated era just before the dramatic changes of the 1960s, when we all believed that bad things didn’t happen in our own small towns if we all followed the rules. In between the carefully researched true crime procedural chapters, the thread of the story winds back to chapters of my coming-of-age memoir about our quirky family life and my dawning realization that sometimes terrible things can happen to good girls. That evil can hide behind a mask of normalcy.

The Latest

Bob Holt Reporting

From the Author: During my dad’s career, he wrote a weekly Bob Holt Reporting newspaper column on every subject imaginable – from the mundane to the lofty. He wrote about anything that interested him, and everything interested him, especially our quirky family life. His whimsical columns about the goings on in our home ran in the same newspaper as the banner headlined articles he wrote about the sensational murder. I have chapters about my family alternating with the crime chapters in A LOVELY GIRL because that is the way I lived this story.

My Wife Has Quite A Different View

My father sometimes wrote columns about my mother and with only a few exceptions she enjoyed them. I can remember her laughing her head off as she read. Sometimes she would laugh so hard that he would ask her (in an irritated voice!) to please leave the room because...

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View from the rear

View from the rear

During my dad’s career, he wrote thousands of columns on every subject imaginable – from the mundane to the lofty. He wrote about anything that interested him, and everything interested him. Here is one of his columns from March 24, 1983. JACK M. AZEVEDO faces his day...

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SOFTENING UP THE POGO STICK

SOFTENING UP THE POGO STICK

The assignments which devolve upon a parent of young and growing child are remarkable for their diversity. Some may be instructive, some uplifting and some bordering on the hilarious. A task which had elements of all three, plus an added fillip of danger, fell my way...

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Deborah Holt Larkin Reporting

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Connect with the Author

If you would like to send me a comment about the Duncan Case or another old crime that impacted you while growing up, I’d love to hear from you.
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