HER CASE HAD BEEN CLOSED-BUT NOT FORGOTTEN. On an unseasonably warm winter evening in Pennsylvania, 15-year-old Patty Desmond sneaked out through the basement of her house. She had a history of running away, and that, combined with an argument with her mother, gave police reason to suspect she'd come home in a week or two. The year was 1965. That night was the last time her family ever saw her. Conrad Eugene Miller was well-known to local law enforcement. An older married man with a child, Miller's association with Patty was questionable at best. Yet he was the last person known to have seen her alive-and the suspect police continued to circle back toward. After nothing but false sightings and rumors, the case was moved to the backburner-where it stayed. As decades crept by, reality sunk Patty Desmond was never coming back. Then, a tiny crack unleashed a flood of information, and a mystery that had never quite been forgotten was solved.
Child Last Seen is a suspenseful and compelling true crime story about the 1965 disappearance of a 15-year old Pennsylvania girl, and how the cold case was solved decades later by detectives who were determined to bring her killer to justice. Author Maureen Boyle is a first-rate journalist and writer who brings the characters to life, and chronicles the investigation and forensics involved in fascinating and fast-paced detail. All with compassion for the life lost and the small community left with a hole in its heart. An excellent read.
This is an intriguing and well-written true story about the search for a 15-year-old girl and the eventual discovery of what happened to her. I couldn’t put Boyle’s book down, and I read this straight through the weekend.
There are forensic science photographs included, and those are historic. I ordered from Amazon and An Unlikely Story in Plainville for summer gifts.
Maureen Boyle continues her streak by turning out another fascinating true crime account, this one on the disappearance of a 15 year old in 1965. What we can appreciate most about this book is the level of detail Boyle is able to extract from her prodigious research and how she is able to translate that into a highly readable, fast-paced story.
I had never heard of this case and being a true crime buff I was interested. The telling of the case was intriguing but I did not like all of the statistics and history that waz included so that's the reason behind the 2 stars
Maureen Boyle has written another incredible book. Her research and the tireless work of speaking to anyone and everyone associated with a case is unequalled. The story telling was fast paced, in-depth and suspenseful. I could not book this book down. If you haven't read this book, or any of her others, put them on your MUST read list.
Boring and very repetitive. Unnecessary details and explanations are tedious. They add nothing to the story. Information was often repeated sometimes in a page or two sometimes in a following paragraph. A waste of time.
Such a sad story. My heart just breaks for that family and the years they went without answers about where Patty was. I also feel so bad for the family of the killer.