Candice Wuehle's MONARCH, a humorous novel based on a popular '90s-era conspiracy theory, about a former child beauty queen who falls in love with a fellow pageant girl and, with the help of her riot grrrl babysitter, decides to take down the organization that secretly programmed her as an assassin, to Sarah Lyn Rogers at Soft Skull.
After waking up with a strange taste in her mouth and mysterious bruises, former child pageant star Jessica Clink unwittingly begins an investigation into a nefarious deep state underworld. Equipped with the eccentric education of her father, Dr. Clink (a professor of Boredom Studies and the founder of an elite study group known as the Devil’s Workshop), Jessica uncovers a disquieting connection between her former life as a beauty queen and an offshoot of Project MKUltra known as MONARCH.
As Jessica moves closer to the truth, she begins to suspect the involvement of everyone around her, including her own mother, Grethe (a Norwegian pageant queen turned occult American wellness guru for suburban housewives). With the help of Christine (her black-lipsticked riot grrrl babysitter and confidante), Jessica sets out to take down Project MONARCH. More importantly, she must discover if her first love, fellow teen queen Veronica Marshall, was genuine or yet another deep state plant.
Merging iconic true crime stories of the ’90s (Lorena Bobbitt, Nicole Brown Simpson, and JonBenét Ramsey) with theories of human consciousness, folklore, and a perennial cultural fixation with dead girls, MONARCH questions the shadow sides of self-concept: Who are you if you don’t know yourself?
"If the vacant, robotic gaze of the beauty queen has ever seemed sinister to you, Ms. Wuehle provides a possible reason... Wuehle pursues her gonzo premise with satirical gusto, mixing together some curious brew of Robert Ludlum and Don DeLillo.. [A] lively debut." —Sam Sacks, The Wall Street Journal
"Intoxicating and strange . . . A novel that's as addicting as it is heartbreaking." —Sophia June, NYLON, One of the Must-Read Books of the Month
"Candice Wuehle had me at 'Jon Benet Ramsey.' The poet's new novel follows a former child pageant star as she discovers ties to her previous glory and a deep state government program. Add an occult wellness guru to the mix, a heaping of mommy issues, and a queer romance for taste and this might just be my ideal book." —Kerensa Cadenas, Thrillist
"Bizarre delight of a debut novel . . . A natural page-turner." —Lily DeTaeye, Little Village
"Wuehle’s net of insights, jokes, linguistic will-o’-the-wisps push the definition of surreal . . . Wuehle is a poet writing a thriller, and the cerebral, beautiful poetry intoxicates the story . . . A maze of lyrically breathtaking imagery and storytelling that rivals the stepping-stone pathways across the dream-river in the films of Charlie Kaufman (see Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, Synechdoche, New York, I’m Thinking of Ending Things, etc) . . . ‘90s pop culture, espionage, occultism are all bonded in an amalgam of feminist folklore for the 21st century." —Jesse Hilson, Pink Plastic House
"Monarch is a novel of ideas welded to the structure of a page-turner . . . Darkly comic, cynical, thought-provoking, and strange, Wuehle’s novel is a rare offering." —Mara Krause, ZYZZYVA
"Wuehle is catching a wave of nineties nostalgia and retrospective media criticism, in large part ushered in by the immensely popular podcast, 'You’re Wrong About' . . . As much as MONARCH is a conspiracy-theory-thriller, inviting the possibility that an amorphous, terrible something in one’s environment might be located and made legible, it is also a story about piecing together the fuzzy impressions of childhood, watching as they form into a coherent whole the way a photo develops in a darkroom. Wuehle is masterful . . . An artisan; one senses while reading her that she has absolute control over the page—could conjure any emotion or image with startling concision, no matter how surreal or uncanny." —Lily Houston Smith, Chicago Review of Books
"A sinisterly fun novel . . . For fans of Stranger Things mixed with Little Miss Sunshine. It doesn’t sound like it works, but it sure as hell does." —Adam Vitcavage, Debutiful
"What does it mean when you’re not who you thought you were? Alternately: the categories of 'beauty queen' and 'sleeper agent' have, historically speaking, not had much overlap. Candace Wuehle’s forthcoming Monarch poses the question: what if someone could lay claim to both of those job descriptions? Throw in a touch of the occult and a bit of punk rock and you have an intriguing combination." —Tobias Carroll, Tor.com
"Fantastically strange . . . Monarch feels a bit like the folks behind You’re Wrong About teamed up with the writers of Killing Eve, and they all did some psychedelics and wrote a script together." —Molly Odintz, CrimeReads, A Most Anticipated Book
"A deeply introspective novel with a notable metaphor for reinvention after trauma in the form of a weaponized pageant girl." —Kirkus Reviews
"Readers sturdy enough to peer into this glittering, multifaceted novel will find weaponized beauty reflected back." —Publishers Weekly
“A wise, unsettling, and multifaceted masterpiece, MONARCH succeeds on all levels—as a portrait of an endearingly dysfunctional family, as a shadow history of Y2K and the hidden power structure underlying and undermining contemporary life, and as a profound exploration of the extremely dicey prospect of being a self in a body in the world. Unless you’re hiding in an underground city or frozen in a kryokammer in the desert, you'll want to run out and get this one right away!” —David Leo Rice, author of The Dodge City Trilogy, Angel House, and Drifter: Stories
“In this riddled pageantric, insomniac, photographic, and university-infused world of eating disorders, triple suicides, astral projections, enigmatic bruises, and uncontrollable impulses, Candice Wuehle’s poetic and narrative gaze on everything she Midas-touches is eyelined, eyeshadowed, polished, Norwegian lip-penciled, and loose powdered with her devilishly inventive, singularly imaginative beauty and a devastating wry sense of humor. Her brilliance in MONARCH will lacquer, enamel, and wax you and turn your mind inside out like a monarch butterfly macerated in emulsion.” —Vi Khi Nao, author of The Vegas Dilemma and Swimming with Dead Stars
"Don DeLillo can only dream of being Candice Wuehle, who's wrenched the maximalist postmodern novel from the hands of old white men and given it an enticingly feminist spin. MONARCH is a smart, weird, funny gut punch, the kind of book that will blister your brain in the best possible way." —Rafael Frumkin, author of The Comedown
This book is really quite sinister, and I mean that in the Latin
sense--MONARCH takes the left-hand path through a chilling (and, if
you're honest with yourself, quite real) landscape as Jessica, a
decommissioned MK Ultra-esque beauty queen traces back to her origins
as such. Along the way, she has to tell the true from the false,
which can be difficult when you have a closet full of alters and a
lot of gruesome off-label memories.
Underneath it all is
a question you can probably relate to even if you aren't the progeny
of a cryogenically preserved mother and a father who lectures on
Boredom Studies: How do we know which of our reactions belong to us?
How can we tell apart the conditioned self from the one we actually
live with, especially when we've been trauma-trained into not looking
too closely at certain facts? What happens when our frozen selves
start to thaw?
If you've always
been suspicious of the institutions of childhood, beauty, and
sentimentality, this book is for you. If you crave a frosty narrative
voice with the whip and torque of a bitchy gymnast, this book is for
you. It will make you smarter. And it will also upset your schema for
the world--but you'll be glad, I promise.—Sarah Elaine Smith,
author of Marilou is Everywhere
Poet Candice
Wuehle's irresistibly weird debut novel Monarch is the kind of book
that you want to start reading again immediately after turning the
last page — not just to trace the conspiracy at its heart, but to
appreciate how its kaleidoscope of beauty pageants, Y2K anxieties,
famous dead girls, and deep state machinations synthesizes into an
exploration of what makes up a self.
Jessica Greenglass
Clink self-consciously narrates Monarch as she attempts to make sense
of how much of her life was ever her own. We start with her
parentage. The daughter of Grethe, a Norwegian beauty queen, and Dr.
Clink (always Dr. Clink), a professor at the fictional Midwestern
University, Jessica is "basically like what would happen if
Barbie and Dr. Strangelove had a lovechild." Swap nuclear war
expertise with the study of extreme boredom and crimes of passion —
research that gains notoriety in the wake of Lorena Bobbitt's trial —
and you get Dr. Clink.
Though they live in
what Jessica calls "the oeil de taureau of America" (that's
French for bullseye), and though her 1990s adolescence is littered
with the pop culture hallmarks of the decade—looping news footage
of Nicole Brown Simpson's murder scene, the "ethereal yodeling"
of The Cranberries, AOL CD-ROMs, tanning with a Playboy Bunny sticker
on your hipbone — her upbringing is anything but average. She won't
wake up to the clues of its sinister core until the end of the
millennium. "The thing about being a teenager is that everything
seems normal because nothing is normal," Wuehle writes, a
diagnosis that feels apt until it isn't.
In the first half of
Monarch, Wuehle conjures enthrallingly eccentric formative years for
Jessica. She spends her days training for mother-daughter beauty
pageants, helping Grethe at bizarre Tupperware parties as she
demonstrates a plastic cryogenic freezer she sleeps in to halt the
aging process, and traveling to her father's alma mater of Desert
University — an "ivy-less Oxford" where Chancellor Lethe
(like the river of oblivion) drills her with riddles in catechism.
This is a portentous
crucible in which to be forged, compounded further by a home
environment thrumming with "subtle panic." Only "essential
personnel" are permitted inside this fortress where Dr. Clink
manically draws up an academic journal issue responding to "the
modern condition" (aka the internet) and Grethe stalks around
the house with a knife "in a macabre before-bed ritual."
Jessica originally assumes that Grethe, like many women who steep
themselves in stories about misogynistic violence, was simply spooked
into vigilance from watching too many episodes of her favorite
true-crime and shadow history show, Unsolved Mysteries. But she notes
in an aside to the reader, "Is this enough to explain to you why
I believed there was some serious and maybe immediate violence always
near me?"
Jessica's only
tether to the outside world is her babysitter Christine, a Norwegian
American riot grrrl in black lipstick who "possesse[s] an
unfettered sense of revenge accessible only to people with a supreme,
nearly supernatural sense of self-worth" — exactly what
Jessica lacks. It is Christine who teaches Jessica to critically
examine the power structures around her, to understand that "any
kind of narrative [is] a blinder; the tiny screens that convince the
horse there is only one path." And it is Christine who convinces
Jessica to quit pageantry at age 13, after her coach forces her to
sabotage fellow beauty queen Veronica Marshall — her first love,
who gave her a taste of normal teenage life. Soon after, she begins
waking up with a bitter, "bad-good" taste in her mouth,
covered in bruises.
The reality of the
violence Jessica felt near to her reveals itself gradually as she
comes of age in her own body and soul. As the days count down to Y2K,
Jessica, now 19, is working part-time a photography store. She
develops photos reminiscent of JonBenét Ramsey's murder scene — a
bloodbath that recalls for her "images of myself in another
country, images of myself with bloody hands." In the second half
of the novel, Jessica learns that she had been programmed as an agent
in an offshoot of Project MKUltra known as MONARCH, trained to
transition between personas in order to gather intelligence.
Readers hungry for
the motives of MONARCH — or even what the cryptonym means — won't
find much here, a choice that pays off. Wuehle is less concerned with
deep state spycraft than with the question of how to differentiate
who we are from who we are programmed to be. Jessica's conditioning
via pageantry (her coach was really a plant), Chancellor Lethe's
schemes, and her parents' complicity puts this quandary to an
extreme. But as Dr. Clink explains toward the end of the novel, all
of us experience the difficulty of untangling our essence from our
context: "My life has been the same as anyone's: I was born into
a system and I never saw it from the outside." This makes for a
far more interesting novel than the international espionage thriller
it could have been without Wuehle's poetic, haunting touch.
"Power,
Chancellor Lethe had once told me, is knowing the rules don't exist,"
Jessica reflects as she sets out on a quest — for feminist
vengeance, for the truth about Veronica (was she yet another plant?),
for her own self. As she breaks all the rules that the creators of
MONARCH had instilled in her, instead drawing on Christine's lessons,
Jessica takes control over the narrative of her life, the story that
she is telling us now. Wuehle's decision to put the reins of pacing
and structure in the hands of her narrator — who speaks many
tongues and takes us through a "study in circles" until she
is ready to "start talking about spirals" and drive us into
the darkness of the underworld — reinforces the radical potential
of having the final word.
Monarch is
ultimately a story about stories: of Jessica's erasure and
reinvention, of the Norwegian folklore that Grethe carried from her
homeland, of true crime narratives that tell us that no one is more
perfect than a dead girl, of memory and trauma and consciousness.
Jessica's testimony reminds us that "nothing — no memory,
impression, emotion, or idea — is ever lost." We can always
remember who we are, even when the forces around us demand that we
forget. - Kristen Martin
https://www.npr.org/2022/03/28/1089121396/a-sleeper-agent-pageant-queen-exacts-revenge-and-finds-herself-in-monarch
Every day, a new uncovering. People, places, and ideas are revealed
to no longer be what they’d seemed to be. The tricky thing about
masks is what they really show: the performative nature of the self
and the fractured, amalgam nature of identity.
After we broke up,
my high school ex instructed me to “remember who you were before we
started dating.” This instruction followed a period of prolonged
misery in which I attempted to convince him by any means possible to
take me back: a revived relationship with his friends, petitions to
return to that feeling from when we first started dating, and an
email containing an entire monologue spoken by Captain Ahab in
Moby-Dick, which I’d dreamed he’d whispered in my ear before I
went on stage to deliver some kind of speech. At the time, the
performance of the dream felt unrelated to my life, but in
retrospect, I think it may have foretold the life I was about to
live. A year after the breakup, I acquired a collection of colorful
wigs, could quote diligently from The Power of Now, and got mixed up
into the world of immersive theater.
Immersive theater is
a whole other beast from, say, the musical The Lion King. When people
hear “immersive theater,” I assume the first thing that comes to
mind is Punchdrunk’s Macbeth-inspired Sleep No More, a New York
City site-specific theatrical installation that leads
audience-participants through a series of well-decorated, dimly lit
spaces. The immersive theater projects I got involved with shared
some elements in common with the New York-based show, including an
eclectic cast, an air of mystery, and a reliance on heavy,
rouge-colored fabrics, but were different in their explicit content
ratings and exclusivity. The main project I worked for was a
members-only goth-themed nightclub set in an abandoned warehouse in
Chicago (you had to follow a strict all-black dress code just to get
in the door), catering mainly to rich and often Insta-famous
partygoers. When one of the club owners first contacted me, I had to
pass a strange and foreboding first test: “sending him a couple
photos of myself.” He never asked to see my work, though my job
would be to type sibylline, personalized poems for the partygoers.I
got the job, and I was excited to get started. From the time I’d
spent reading Ram Dass and other spiritual self-help books following
my breakup, I’d come to believe that my “true self” was
unstable, ever-changing—a blank slate capable of containing
infinite multiplicities. The club was an opportunity to explore that
fully. I could pick a new name. Wear a mask. I believed I was
enacting some secret of the universe. Good on my word, I was
remembering myself.
The protagonist of
Candice Wuehle’s Monarch, Jessica Clink, learns to perform, to wear
masks, from a very young age. A child beauty queen of the late
nineties, Jessica is a self-proclaimed “brat” who decides she
likes her babysitter enough “to allow her to behold her Caboodles
of industry-grade cosmetics, her closet of tulle and sequin, her
tiaras.” The narrator even refers to her own storytelling as a
“performance.” Jessica’s pageantry is at the behest of both of
her parents: her father, Dr. Clink, who regards his daughter “with
the neutral attention a trainer gives to a show dog” and works as a
professor of Boredom Studies at Midwestern University, and Jessica's
mother, Grethe, a former pageant champion who looks less like
Jessica’s mother and more like her doppelgänger. Jessica’s
parents hire Crystal, the wife of one of her father’s colleagues,
to work as Jessica’s pageant coach. Over time, Crystal teaches her
to look in the mirror and “remove her entire face and replace it
with another.” Eventually, Jessica removes the mirror itself,
letting “various faces flow over” her in “the darkened basement
rec room.”
On the eve of the
goth club’s opening, we were asked to arrive early to meet the team
and set up. I wore a black pinafore dress with a mesh, sparkly black
undershirt, which, upon seeing the rest of the performers' outfits, I
worried introduced too much light into the environment. No doubt, the
other entertainers were more practiced: half of them were flown in
from a club in LA, paying little attention to me as I unloaded my
typewriter and basket of trinkets, including a turn-of-the-century
blue medicine bottle and a taxidermied alligator head. It was
allowed, I guess, for props to not be black. One of the women had
covered her face, arms, and neck in weird, black marks that looked
like alien script and wore clothes I can only describe as possessing
an unnecessary amount of adaptable features: straps, buckles, random
pockets. Another guy wore gloves that looked like they were made for
riding motorcycles, a leather vest, and a skeletal mask with a cross
stamped in the center of the forehead. Others wore dog collars and
strappy lingerie.
The owners and
senior performers led us in a conversation about consent as people
lit a few stray candles and snagged one last drink before
opening—guests would be brought into dark, secret rooms, asked to
reveal their deepest fears, even blindfolded. "We want this to
be a safe space," one of the club owners said. "Seductive,
but not sexual," was the refrain. I wondered what exactly that
looked like. What that meant. Then, we were sworn to secrecy,
instructed to never reveal what happened in the club, or else face
eternal banishment and other, unspecified consequences. I made the
promise. "Seductive, but not sexual."
When Jessica falls
in love with a fellow beauty queen, Veronica Marshall, her
performances in pageantry begin to suffer. She stops practicing the
mirror technique and rebels against Crystal. Finally, her memory
begins to fail, or the facade of memory Crystal has implanted in her
brain begins to crack: “I missed the step in a dance routine” or
“I forgot to smile as I walked on stage.” Eventually, Jessica
quits doing pageants altogether, and something insidious enters the
narrative, a sense that she has been tricked into believing an
essential lie about her personhood. “I, too, believed my mask was
my face,” she relates. Following a particularly poignant experience
in a church, Jessica begins to question the reality of this
sentiment. She becomes fixated on the words of the priest,
Corinthians 6:19-20: “You are not your own; you were bought at a
price.” Later, she pores over the priest’s words at her new job
at the University photo lab. How much was she bought for? And by
whom?
The private rooms
were supposed to help guests transform their lives, somehow. Like the
books that taught me to revel in my many-parted self, the rooms were
of the New Age-y "self-help" genre, only sexually-charged
(sorry, “seductively-charged”), monochromatic, and full of drugs
and alcohol. Some performers had jobs as "runners." They
were responsible for locating prospective initiates and leading them
to the private rooms’ top-secret locations. Twenty minutes before
the doors opened that first night, after one of the owners handed me
a little black membership card with the addendum that I should return
it to him afterward (so, technically, my membership was only
temporary, and so too, my oath to secrecy), one of the runners
approached me and held out her hand. She looked at me with eyes that
stank of the allure of some mischievous, unknown, future event, and I
knew then what the owners meant when they encouraged us to use our
powers of "seduction.” Refusing her hand, while technically
permitted, would have placed me in a position adverse to the entire
operation: the girl, the owners, the coolness of the club, the
"privilege" to have been chosen as an initiate.
She led me out past
the dance floor and down a flight of stairs, then through a set of
heavy black doors, around a turn, down another flight of stairs. It
was a kind of preparatory disorientation, being spun around and
around, though I had no knowledge either of where or what my target
was. We came to the basement. There were still pizza boxes,
liquor-infused chocolates, and black lipstick strewn about from when
the cast had gotten ready just half an hour before. I didn't see
anyone as we walked across the large, open room, but it was brightly
lit, a stark contrast to the candlelight illuminating the rest of the
building. This was the only time I felt I could be in over my head.
Something about the backstagedness of the space raised an alarm in
me, but the alarm's sound came and went. I only need put on the mask
of my courageous self and I would get through it.
What actually
happened in the private rooms was less memorable, to be honest. In
fact, every ritual I participated in at the club reminded me of the
kinds of games I used to invent with my friends at sleepovers in the
mid-2000's, except these were less inspired. I entered a room of
three or four hooded figures covered head to toe in thick, black
covers. It was kind of like entering a poorly-lit, gothic office and
meeting a group of expectant, dementor-like business people. The
girl, my runner, left and closed the door behind her, and one of the
dementors shouted, "Sit!" I sat on the carpeted floor.
Then, one of them turned their head and began to speak in a
constructed language. It sounded otherworldly, alien-like, punctuated
by clicks, consonant-heavy. In English, another one asked me, "what
do you desire?" They gestured at three magical-looking objects
laid out on the coffee table in front of me. I picked something. It
was cube-like. They told me what it meant. That part I don't
remember.
The sequined veil of
Jessica’s beauty pageant life unravels even further when signs that
she has been unwittingly involved in a deep-state operation start to
appear. After uncovering a series of disturbing photos of herself
with bloody hands in another country, Jessica begins to have intense
nightmares from which she wakes up in actual pain and with
in-the-flesh bruises, unable to identify their source. Eventually, it
is revealed that she is a Multi-Dimensional Identity Acquisitor, part
of the MKUltra offshoot MONARCH, which means she has several
different “personas” she can “transition” into, each with
“its own memories, education, talents, languages, gestures,
postural and muscle memory.” The program is run by Jessica’s
father, and every moment of significance in Jessica’s life no
longer belongs to her. Jian, a fellow MONARCH agent, explains to
Jessica why a recurring dream of hers does not reflect reality:
They do that to
you girls. They implant narratives in your dreams so that you don’t
ask questions in life. Mostly they do it to the honeypots, they
implant these vivid dreams of fucking strangers so that the girls
don’t wonder what compels them to seduce the assets. They think it
was their own idea.
We tend to think of
violence as an explicit physical act, as something we can see, but
some of the worst violences are those which are less visible. It’s
their invisibility that creates their treachery.
I worked at the goth
club for six months, typing poems for people in that musty service
elevator, warding off the advances of older men, occasionally
requesting that some couple who’d decided to take over the booth I
was stationed at when I went on break please find a different place
to make out. Eventually, the owners decided the model didn’t work
in Chicago like it did in LA (“the people weren’t cool enough”
is what they’d supposedly said), and they shut down the operation.
Then, a few years later, I discovered the LA club had closed its
doors following a slew of sexual misconduct allegations. Multiple
performers and guests had reported uncomfortable interactions to the
club’s higher-ups, and they failed to do anything about it. They
failed to see and acknowledge the environment they’d created. And
it was easy, I suppose (actually, it was the perfect breeding ground)
for perpetrators to hide behind the club’s boundary-pushing
aesthetic, for them to believe their own convenient lies: that saying
“yes” in that environment was ever a free expression of consent.
That harassment doesn’t happen in the nuances of everyday
interaction, in the presence of others. That the structures that
enable such abuses of power aren’t intricately woven into everyday
life.
Initially, I thought
the irony of my ex’s advice to “remember who I was before we
started dating” was contained in the fact that the person I’d
discovered once I actually went on that journey was anything but a
single entity. I was many, multiple, the potential to play the role
of anyone, fearless, reveling in that mystery. Now, I look back on
what he said and read the irony in a new way. His request is an
impossible feat, lacking awareness of what it means to live in the
truth that as a woman, my “self” was always shaped by men like
him. Like Jessica, I was full of implanted narratives. All potential
versions were impure, influenced. And like Jessica, I used my art to
survive. As she says, “this is the story of the creature’s
creature. At some point, monsters learn to create their own art.”
Even the perceived “spiritual understanding” I had gained, my
journey into mystical ideas about the self’s multiplicity and
capacity for play, the thing that got me into immersive theater in
the first place, can be read as another way I tried to cope following
the traumatic relationship with my ex. Nothing is sacred or immune.
But Monarch offers
us some hope. It contains glimpses of experiences Jessica may
understand as truly hers, the most prominent being her love
relationship with Veronica: “The idea was that if everything about
her had been someone else’s idea, then that feeling with Veronica
could only be her own.” There are certain felt experiences that
can, maybe, escape the system of patriarchal influence. Perhaps the
utility of masks, of the self’s fracturing, can be redeemed,
depending on the shard of mirror you salvage. - Elise Houcek
https://www.clereviewofbooks.com/writing/candice-wuehle-monarch
Luke Rolfes: Candice
Wuehle is the author of several books of poetry, and, recently, the
novel Monarch from Soft Skull Press—a wonderfully weird and
beautiful book that takes readers on a strange journey from beauty
pageants to Boredom Studies to micro-chipped government operatives.
Thanks so much for talking with us, Candice!
I’d love to hear
about the genesis of Monarch and what influenced this particular
novel. Where did you get the idea not just for this story but this
style of story?
Candice Wuehle: The
plot is based on a real conspiracy theory that asserts a secret wing
of the CIA, Operation MONARCH, recruits agents from beauty pageant
contests because they possess a specific skill set—they’re
attractive, obedient, and charming. From there, I developed my own
childhood fixation on the murder of JonBenèt Ramsey into a story
about a young woman much like her who lives, grows up, discovers
she’s been an unwitting agent in a deep state program and takes her
revenge on the forces that placed here there.
How I came upon this
style of story is very related to research I was doing toward the end
of my doctorate on trauma studies. I was really interested in the
idea that trauma is marked by its unspeakability as well as its
tendency to emerge in a non-linear manner, so the style is intended
to represent the unpredictable, peripatetic mode not so much of
speaking about trauma, but speaking through it.
LR: Following up on
that, were there any movies, music, books, art pieces that were
influential in your shaping, or that you see as companion pieces?
This book is set in the late 1990s. Did you, for instance, listen to
a bunch of mixed CDs from the time period to ground yourself in that
moment?
CW: MONARCH
dialogues with a pretty wide spectrum of inspirations and references,
ranging from ‘90s dark comedies (like Drop Dead Gorgeous) to more
canonical films about memory (like La Jetée). I’ve always been
really obsessed with glitching in storytelling and I think the one
element that unites all the different texts that went into writing
MONARCH is the idea that a narrative can malfunction the same way
memory malfunctions. In ‘90s dark comedies, this comes across for
me in the tone—the way that these movies are aware of the culture
they satirize, yet they also propagate that culture because they’re
a part of it. In La Jetée, the glitch is much more direct. An actual
screen freezing, a distortion.
As for mixed CDs, I
actually didn’t listen to much music from the time period to ground
myself. I mainlined pop culture so hard in the ‘90s that it’s
pretty ingrained! Instead, I listened to what I thought the main
character would be listening to, which was Joy Division, The Smiths,
and a lot of actual white noise. This is a book about a person
inventing a personality, so I wanted the tonal backdrop I worked into
either be blank or totally affected.
LR: Monarch could
potentially fall under many different labels of genre: Speculative
fiction? Science fiction? Experimental? Postmodern? Sci-Horror?
Slipstream? Did labels and whether or not your work fit under a
certain genre matter to you in the conceptualizing of this book? Did
you start out saying “I want to write a science fiction novel,”
or did you let the story take you in whatever direction it wanted to
go?
CW: I love this
question! I was on a sci-fi panel at the LA Times Book Festival,
which was a great experience, but I definitely felt out of place! So,
no, I never intended to write any kind of novel other than literary.
You’re right to guess that I just let the story go in the direction
that it wanted to go in. I suppose I never worried about genre
because most of my favorite books defy genre—I think of Orlando by
Virginia Woolf, of Margret Atwood’s novels, of Kafka. Honestly,
when I start thinking of books I think are great, it’s much harder
for me to think of one that is solidly within a genre than one that
is hybrid in some way. I went to one of Selah Saterstrom’s Sunday
divination writing workshops recently, where she spoke about the
three of hearts as the tarot card of hybrid genre because, to quote
her really roughly, “all emotional stories are pierced by multiple
ways of telling.” I don’t just believe that—I don’t know any
other way to tell a story.
LR: The novel begins
in a fairly recognizable reality—well, reality adjacent, perhaps.
The setting, at least, is grounded in 90’s tropes that early
Millennials and Generation Xers remember. Early on, we are treated to
some vignettes and images of grisly nightmares, but we don’t know
how Jessica (the narrator) fits into the strange world of beauty
pageants, nighttime bruises, and odd parents who don’t seem to
belong to normal, suburban society. The major speculative and sci-fi
elements aren’t revealed until the middle of the book, and that is
when readers get to see the uniqueness of Jessica’s identity and
plight more fully. I really liked the pacing and slow build of this
book, how the mystery of the world unraveled like a tightly wound
ball of thread. Can you talk about managing the release of
information in this novel? Was it hard to keep so much close to the
vest early on?
CW: Yes!! As I got
closer and closer to the end of the book, it became increasingly
difficult to keep pace because I just really wanted to get to the
book’s major reveals. Discipline is obvious a big part of
writing—you have to write to, you know, be a writer, and you have
to do that pretty much every day—but this book required a lot of
discipline in terms of the plot pacing, especially at the end. Early
drafts of this book jump pretty abruptly, in part because I wanted to
make sure I got to those major plot points, and because I couldn’t
wait! For me, a lot of writing a first draft is really just
entertaining myself. Later drafts are for other people, so that’s
where I step back and try to look at the pacing and the questions
that haven’t yet been answered or the relationships that haven’t
been fully explored and then re-pace by incorporating that
information. I’m really lucky to have first readers who understand
what I’m trying to do and who give me feedback that’s more geared
toward pointing to what can be filled in than what can be totally
restructured. They make the novel more itself, they help accentuate
significant themes and characters. In short, the answer to these
questions is pretty workshop 101: I draft, I get feedback, I have fun
and make a mess early on and then I clean it up for a long time.
LR: Speaking of the
90s, Monarch gives readers tons of pop culture references. OJ Simpson
trial, Lorena Bobbitt, Y2K, mixed CDs, just to name a few. Can you
tell us what about this particular decade appealed so much to you for
this narrative? Would this have been a different book if it were,
say, set in the late 80’s or early 2000’s?
CW: Yeah, that’s a
great question. The book naturally emerged as set in the ‘90s
because I was aligning it with the death of JonBenèt Ramsey to some
extent. And, of course, I grew up in the ‘90s and am pretty much
the same age as Jessica, the main character (actually, in reference
to your previous question—one way I kept track of the threads of
the novel was to simply make Jessica’s birthday my own, which
really did help ground me in the wash of cultural and political life
at the time).
The book would
certainly be different if set in the ‘80s or early 2000s. MONARCH
is really engaged in beauty culture and fashion and trends as well as
in the late ‘90s as a sort of fin de siècle, an end of everything
but also a transformation. Themes of presentation, death, and a
fetishization of death via beauty culture (anorexic models, heroin
chic, etc.) as well as the Y2K obsession with prophesy and end times
(I feel like there was a new Nostradamus documentary on the History
Chanel every weekend of ’99!) shape the texture of the book quite a
bit.
LR: A theme in this
book is youth trauma (and violence). A scene that sticks with me is
when Jessica experiments with the Dead Ringers (a neighborhood youth
“fight club”). Jessica, for the first time, steps outside of her
body, and can do things she didn’t think were possible. Her
experience with Dead Ringers reminds me, vaguely, of her time in the
beauty pageants. Can you talk a bit about the role of trauma in this
book? Was it difficult to marry this theme with the
speculative/sci-fi threads?
CW: The sci-fi
thread actually emerged because this is a book about trauma, I think.
One thing that gets said again and again about trauma is that its
“unspeakable,” right? It both cannot and must be spoken, thus
trauma survivors tend to depend heavily on metaphor until they
retrieve or develop the language that can express their experience.
The sci-fi element of this book (about freezing in a chamber that
halts the aging process) is one extended metaphor that plays on the
idea of the freeze trauma response. One of the moments that I think
about the most from my coursework on trauma studies is watching the
testimony of K-Zetnik in the Eichmann trial and reading Shoshana
Felman’s incredible analysis of this testimony in her book, The
Juridical Unconscious: Trials and Trauma in the Twentieth Century. In
short, K-Zetnik was a survivor as well as a writer and when called
upon to testify about his imprisonment at Auschwitz, he frequently
employed metaphor. The court requested he contain his remarks to
facts, which he attempted to do until eventually collapsing on the
witness stand. It’s not just “easier” to discuss traumatic
events through metaphor; it’s sometimes only possible to discuss
them through metaphor. Sci-fi is often an extended metaphor, so
discussing the structure of trauma through this genre seemed
intuitive to me.
LR: I loved the
college section of this book, especially the characters in the
dormitory and the dynamic between them. My brother went to University
of Iowa, and he lived in an off-campus building called
Mayflower—which is the name of the dorm in the book. Just out of
curiosity, is that dorm an inspiration for the one in Monarch?
CW: Yes, It
absolutely is! You’re only the second person to ask that. I was
always fascinated with the Mayflower dorm at Iowa (where I did my
undergraduate) because there was a rumor of a triple suicide in which
three girls jump off the dorm’s roof and then haunt the dorm. So,
that rumor emerges in MONARCH during Jessica’s time there. I just
looked for evidence of this ghost story online and I can’t find
anything, so it must not be a big part of campus lore. It’s
possible I knew some people who lived in that dorm that believed it
was haunted? It’s really odd to write about a memory, because at
some point you realize how much you’ve modified it.
LR: Reflections
(physical and figurative) come up time and again. In the climax of
the book, Jessica sees her reflection on steel boxes, and she seems
to ruminate on the idea that her identity is bigger than the self.
Why did you see that particular moment as the end of her journey? Is
it the end?
CW: One of the ideas
that interested me most while writing MONARCH was the idea of where
one’s identity actually comes from. How much is shaped by family,
culture, education, and how much of your identity are you born with?
I’ve always been obsessed with the idea of the Original Face (which
is featured in a college lecture Jessica attends at one point in
MONARCH), which is the concept of “the face you had before your
parents were born.” I think her journey ends with this thought of
the Self going onward and curling tendrils into the future because
only a person who has truly come to “know thyself” can
intentionally extend beyond what’s right in front of them. To put
this differently, I mean that really knowing your own motivations and
desires and truths can allow you to see yourself outside of
context(s), which is/are inherently always decided by other people.
Yeah, I think this
is the end for Jessica. I see her as a character that has answered
the major questions of her life and now has to do the work of
existing. To quote Anne Carson, “to live past the end of your myth
is a perilous thing.” As hinted in the epigraph to MONARCH, Jessica
gets to a place where she survives, but she doesn’t really live
after the trauma she’s endured. I’m not saying people who endure
trauma don’t come to live full lives eventually, but I do want to
provide a representation of a character that isn’t there yet.
Healing takes a long, long time and before that long time, there’s
the long time of just being—and that’s where Jessica ends
MONARCH.
LR: What’s next
for you and your writing?
CW: I’m
tentatively working on a companion to MONARCH that goes back to the
origins of MONARCH, MKUltra, and Jessica’s parents. I thought of
this book while writing MONARCH, so there are certainly some open
ends or oddities in MONARCH that will be addressed in its prequel, if
it ever comes to be.
More immediately,
I’m finishing up my next novel, which is about a ballerina who
joins a cult that choreographs a ballet to end the world. It’s
inspired in part by Russian occultist and composer Alexander
Scriabin. Like MONARCH, this next novel deals with performance and
memory, however the idea of the listener or witness to memory is a
more integral aspect. So—another weird plot with serious ideas told
in the voice of, like, your annoyed older sister.
https://laurelreview.org/candice-wuehle-interview