Zee
Monodee was born and continues to live on the island of Mauritius in
the southern Indian Ocean with her husband and family. As such, her
stories of love and relationships cross many cultural borders and
include insight only a person raised in the exotic can provide.
Holding
a Bachelor’s Degree in Communications Science, Zee soon learned the
corporate world wasn’t for her, and she set course to find her
place as an author. Eleven books to date tend to make it clear that
Zee intends to be around for a while.
Though
Zee’s stories find global locations, I urge readers to take a look
at her Island Girls Trilogy. The setting for each is Mauritius and
exposes the reader to cultural nuances unfamiliar in current day
America, such as how a divorced woman is automatically subjected to
gossip, ridicule, and a societal expectation that she remarry
immediately – love not required.
The
first in the series is “The Other Side,” a story focusing on the
divorce predicament and one woman’s struggle to negotiate the maze
of harassment and matchmaking while trying to find happiness. “Light
My World” explores how embedded the old cultures are in modern
Mauritius, and a young woman’s plight to evade her mother’s
requirements of marriage. “Winds of Change” follows a widow with
children who has abided by the expectations heaped upon her. Still,
there’s a woman inside her with needs, and she wonders if she can
break out of the shell of life she has become.
Zee
writes with a flair for life and love. Her stories can be intense,
though always enjoyable, and, since they’re romance, the happy
ending is guaranteed, though sometimes the reader won’t see it
coming.
Q)
You’re fearless. Have you encountered any backlash from your
stories tackling Mauritius society?
A)
Lol, talk about being fearless – thank goodness I knew nothing of
how virulent Mauritian media could be before I had this book
released! While most women-centered media welcomed the foray into
society and getting behind its closed doors, the other, male-oriented
and patriarchal media had tons to say, and fling at me, for daring to
treat this kind of subject. Remember – when this book first came
out, it was 2007, and divorce was still a hush-hush, taboo matter.
How dare I tackle such a concept and bring it out in the open?
Then,
of course, this was Mauritius, where sectarian differences still
thrive in – thank goodness! – only a small slice of the
population. Just my luck one of the reporters who reviewed and
covered the book’s release was of a different religion, and he made
his beef very public that I, as a Muslim, should’ve written about
Muslims and nothing/no one else.
But
the point this reporter missed – or refused to see, maybe... – is
that I write about culture, not religion. People from the same
country/region/diaspora will find echoes of their culture in others,
despite whatever religious or ethnic belonging ‘separate’ them.
Still,
I stuck to my guns, and then later used this ‘feedback’ to carve
myself another niche – I actually wrote a Muslim romance (Once Upon
A Second Chance; 1NightStand
series,
Decadent Publishing) and wove threads of religion, culture, and what
it means to be Muslim into a tale of reunited lovers. Most readers
who’ve read this tale have mentioned it’s been an eye-opener for
them about Muslims and their culture/beliefs/way of life. I just hope
I did a good job portraying a world that is often misunderstood.
Q)
What has been the greatest difficulty in seeing your work published?
A)
That it’s “different” and “different” is not everyone’s
cup of tea, especially on the publishing side.
Many
of my books, especially when I started writing, focused on
Indo-Mauritian culture and were set in Mauritius. First slam into the
wall: what the heck/where on Earth is Mauritius? Many agents and
publishers shy away from taking on something so ‘exotic’ it’s a
relative unknown worldwide.
Next
up was my culture slant. How many Indian-culture authors do you know?
I know only 3 – Nisha Minhas, Monica Pradhan, and Shobhan Bantwal.
Minhas writes popular fiction about Indian-origin girls in Britain
(so huge market already in the UK). Pradhan, though still popular
fiction, is more book club material – think Amy Tan’s ‘The Joy
Luck Club’ on an Indian twist – with a slight literary slant.
Bantwal writes outright literary, though she tackles heavy issues of
Indian (as in from India itself, not the diaspora) culture like
forced abortions of girls even in our contemporary world.
Enter
Zee Monodee with popular fiction veering on the lighter, rom-com end
of the spectrum, with stories about islanders whose ancestors –
twice to thrice removed – came from India, and their story is set
in a country that is a melting pot of almost every
race/culture/religion of the world. See, I told you – waaaay too
exotic!
In
a way, I think the market wasn’t ready for my particular brand of
culture back then, and I bided my time by writing more mainstream
stories (regular rom-coms set in England, as well espionage tales
happening all over Europe). Until I found the call for 1NightStand
stories at Decadent Publishing, which encouraged ‘worldwide
locations’. Jumped in with my first contribution to this series
(Once Upon A Stormy Night), and this has been my springboard to
unleash my brand of writing on the – unsuspecting *grin* - world.
Q)
You have said your stories are as much literary fiction as romance
due to your heroines’ strengths and plights. Women coming to terms
with themselves and their worlds are important to you. What first
caused you to write about them?
A)
In my bio, I mention that I’ve always felt like I lived on a fence.
I grew up as a Muslim girl of Indian origin in one of the most
rapidly developing countries of Africa that also happens to be an
island dubbed the ‘rainbow nation’ for the harmony that exists
there between all races and religions. That’s a lot for a girl to
take, lol! Jeans from Western culture v/s the kurti
and churidar
of India/Pakistan, not to mention the djellaba
and occasional head scarves from the Muslim culture – knowing which
clothing to pick for whatever occasion is a minefield, trust me!
The
local tongue is Creole, a language derived from French. I spoke
mainly French at home, Creole with my friends, learned English at
school, and spoke/understood Hindi & Urdu (the languages from
India) thanks to so many Bollywood movies that we watched, my mum and
I, right after we downed hefty doses of Falcon Crest, Dallas, &
Dynasty –dubbed in French! – and EastEnders or Neighbours (that
we got in the original English versions).
Fast-forward
to teenage years. A good Indian girl (never mind if she’s Muslim,
Hindu, Tamil, or any other religion!) keeps herself pure and pious
for the ‘good’ marriage she is expected to make. Step out to go
to school, lessons, tuition, hanging out with friends, and what
happens? Boys, of course! How to reconcile your upbringing with peer
pressure, with your own yearnings for adventure and just something
‘more’?
So
it thus happens that I’ve always striven to find my place in the
world, to find where this ‘me’ would figure out her equilibrium
point. And frankly, isn’t that the struggle of every teenager out
there? With globalization blurring geographical and regional
barriers, and more and more population displacement across the world,
how many young women today are striving to find their place in this
new, dynamic, societal setup?s
They
say ‘write what you know’, and I knew what it feels like to stand
on a fence and feel like you don’t or can’t belong to both sides
at the same time. The rest, as they also say, is history.
Q)
You survived a devastating car crash, only to learn later you had
breast cancer. How did those events change your outlook on life?
A)
Lol, yep. Two crushed vertebras in my spine – result of that
accident – put me in the world of chronic back pain sufferers, and
this decreased my scope of action for the future. Like, my range of
action was compromised, and travel exacerbated the pain. A desk job
seemed like the only solution, and that’s how I entered the
corporate world. Being so ‘restrained’ physically made me start
to dream big, to really think of those aspirations that had been
simmering at the back of my mind for maybe forever. Like, write, for
example.
Then
I got married and had my son, and dreams got shelved while I became a
stay-at-home-mum. Barely two years into this stint, and bam, there it
is – the diagnosis for rapidly-developing malignant breast cancer.
At age 22! Yeah, I, too, thought it never happened before the 40s. My
cancer care team got that tumor out in the nick of time; another week
and I’d be toast – the cancer would’ve probably spread to my
whole system. I realized I came close to death...but at the same
time, God had granted me a second chance. I was still alive, still
given the possibility to build a future with my husband, for us and
our son, to watch my kid grow and be there for him the way I’d
promised that just-born baby I would always be for him.
Life
can stop at any given moment; we never know when. It made me
appreciate the moments I get to be alive, to feel, to know that,
maybe, I’ll get to see another day. Trust me, that kind of wakeup
call changes you – you never under-appreciate a single moment of
your life from there on.
And
you decide that the ‘one day’ when you’ll fulfill your dreams
is not in 20, 30, 40 years’ time, or when you’ll retire, or when
the kids will be out of the house, etc. ‘One day’ is right now –
make your dreams a reality; do not wait!
Q)
What’s next for Zee Monodee?
A)
More writing, growing existing series, and more new series? I just
cannot stop the replicator sequence on the plot bunnies in my head.
*grin* Oh, and yeah – dealing with a teenage kid at home (well, 2
actually, when you add my stepson, lol) and making sure those growing
boys do not eat the kitchen sink after they’ve finished raiding the
fridge a few times a day.
Q)
Any parting comments for fans and readers new to your work?
A)
I’d say, Thank
you!
It’s because of you people – readers and fans – that we authors
get our validation. Make yourselves known; don’t be shy! We blabber
all day long and almost hurl word vomit through our keyboards and
screens all day long, more often than not in extreme solitude. We
authors would love, love, love, to blabber with you, the people we
write for, so please, don’t be afraid to get in touch with us! An
email, a comment on a blog post, a PM or wall post on FB, a Tweet –
we’re just waiting for you to reach out to us. I know I am.
And
another thing – when you’ve read a book of ours that you have
enjoyed or even loved, please post a rating, if not better, a review,
for us on places like Amazon and Goodreads. Help us this way, because
it’s thanks to your
involvement that we can become known and our work reach more others –
you,
readers, are the driving force behind this process! Don’t
underestimate yourself there, please. We don’t ask for lengthy
reviews; even 1-2 lines will do. But please, become involved with us
so we can do more for you.
DA Kentner is an award-winning author www.kevad.net