Authors talk about their Nebula nominated fiction
Johanna Sinisalo and other authors talk about their Nebula nominated works.This is one of a series of essays written by the authors of Nebula nominated works and published in the SFWA Bulletin. To view the other essays and biographical notes in pdf format, please click here.
Note: “Baby Doll” appeared in the SFWA European Hall of Fame, and is a Nebula nominee for Best Short Story.
About “Baby Doll” by Johanna Sinisalo
“Baby Doll” is a story about vanishing childhood. But it is
also about vanishing parenthood.
In Finland today an increasing number of families are
run by the children. The kids decide the menus for family
meals, and they also select their own toys, games, tv
shows, and clothes. The parents do not even try to be
authorities; they simply want to keep the family “happy” by
avoiding all conflicts, and so they yield to the most
extravagant demands.
The kids, very aware of their power, use it to gain
access to the titillating world of fake adulthood. Because
the media idols and models themselves keep getting younger
and younger, the borders between the worlds of children and
adults are disappearing. Children are exploited and
marketed to other children, who are exploited in turn,
while the parents pay the bills.
In Finland, it is perfectly natural to see other
family members naked. In sauna baths, complete strangers
sit in the nude, making small talk. Children under the age
of eight or so play naked on the beaches. Because of this
generations-old tradition of not over-sexualizing the
environment, I find it much, much more disturbing to
require a two-year-old girl to wear a top in public.
Johanna Sinisalo Biographical Note
Johanna Sinisalo lives in Tampere, Finland. She has
received the national Atorox Award for the best domestic
sf/f story seven times. She has also written numerous
reviews, articles, comic books, and screenplays, and edited
two anthologies, including The Dedalus Book of Finnish
Fantasy.
Sinisalo’s debut novel, Not Before Sundown a.k.a.
Troll: a Love Story, got the most prestigious literary
award in Finland, the Finlandia Prize, and tied for the
James Tiptree, Jr. Award. She has published three other novels and a story
collection, and is currently working on an sf comedy film
script, Iron Sky.



