Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Baby Dolly

Ruby Jean Jensen (1927-2010) began her writing career penning shorts in the confessional and romance pulps and magazines. Her first novels were gothics published by Paperback Library and Manor Books in the 1970s. Today, she is best remembered as a horror novelist synonymous with the 1980s and 1990s creepy kid and evil doll tropes. I read her “killer tree” book Night Thunder in 1995 and haven't revisited her work since. I decided to try a Paperbacks from Hell staple, Baby Dolly. It was published by Zebra in 1991.

Surprisingly, Baby Dolly is better than it ever has a right to be. It's a killer doll novel and does everything you want and don't want in a horror novel, mainly the deaths of a bunch of kids. Jensen doesn't hold back and keeps the body count stacked consistently through nearly 500 terrifying pages. 

The novel is presented in three books, each around 160-pages. Granted, many of the books I read and review here at PW weigh about 180-pages, so this was the equivalent of reading three novels. The first book is set in the 1910s, the second in the 1950s, and the third in the present-day of 1991. Each of these sections deals specifically with a portion of the Wilfred Family, a wealthy and esteemed establishment living in a mansion in rural Arkansas. 

In the first book, young Rose Marie and her baby are murdered by Rose's mother after becoming pregnant out of wedlock. Yet her mother doesn't use a traditional weapon or poison, but instead places an evil soul-sucking doll in the crib and bed. This doll, stored in the family's upstairs cabinet, crawls onto faces and steals...breath? Jensen never really explains the method of destruction. After Rose Marie and the baby are murdered, the family members left behind are Sybil, Rose's younger sister, and Gertrude. 

We reconnect with Sybil as an old woman in the 1950s, this time living with her son, his wife, and their two daughters. She dies, leaving Gertrude to continue keeping the doll in the family mansion. But again, crazy things happen, and the doll is dragged out to kill family members. In an evil recycle, the 1990s feature another family member, but this time incorporating neighbors and a police officer to investigate the strange happenings within the family tree and the eerie mansion.

I was fully invested in the opening book and loved learning the family history and dynamics, tying it all together. The second book began shaping up as a redo of the first, only with different family members being killed off in the same fashion. By book three, I needed a change of pace, and the author seemingly read my mind. There's a great thread here of two neighborhood girls stumbling onto the abandoned, dilapidated mansion and encountering the doll. This portion of the narrative was laced with so much atmosphere and attention to detail. The discovery of a skeleton in the upstairs bedroom introduced a separate plot involving a murder investigation and a trip down memory lane to see how these characters intertwine and change through the decades. It was a skillful, well-developed story that spread evenly throughout the novel.

Baby Dolly was just terrific. If you love spooky mansions, creepy dolls, bizarre children...you're in Heaven (or Hell?) in this old Zebra paperback? Get the vintage copy HERE or the reprint HERE.

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