“Girls and Their Monsters: The Genain Quadruplets and the Making of Madness in America” by Audrey Clare Farley (Grand Central)
When Sadie Morlok gave birth to quadruplets in 1930, it made the papers in their town of Lansing, Michigan. Under the spotlight since birth, the legacy of the Morlok Quadruplets became intertwined with the history of mental health science in the United States after all four women were diagnosed with schizophrenia in their 20s.
Scholar Audrey Clare Farley’s second book, “Girls and Their Monsters,” examines America’s complicated relationship with mental illness through the four sisters who would become known as the Genain Quadruplets under research done by the ϳԹ Institute of Mental Health. The resulting findings under David Rosenthal’s direction left Edna, Sarah, Wilma and Helen at the center of a nature-nurture debate as the country shifted from an emphasis on Freudian psychology and talk therapy to inherited illness, chemical imbalances and treatment through medication.
Although the story is about a white, Christian, American nuclear family, Farley examines the intersections of race, class, gender and religion with mental health and highlights the way politics sway science by controlling which departments and what types of research get funding.
Mysticism about multiples and America’s affair with eugenics are just some of the intriguing background Farley presents for context. From the Dionne quintuplets — born in Canada shortly after the Morloks and who were used like a baby zoo to attract tourists — to a surprising link between the Morloks and Malcolm X, “Girls and Their Monsters” includes a fascinating swath of information.
The first half of “Girls and Their Monsters” reads like a documentary, lingering on the most interesting details and matter-of-factly hyping up the drama. Pulling on diaries, letters and interviews, Farley starts back at Sadie’s and Carl Morlok’s childhoods, going through their tumultuous marriage even before the added stress of the sudden addition of four mouths to feed.
It only gets more dicey from there. Farley takes readers through the beatings, genital mutilation, social isolation and molestation the quadruplets suffered, their struggles with mental health as well as their personal wins and rebellions, all the way until the present day.
This wide view, covering decades and generations, shows the cyclical nature of abuse and examines the quadruplets in relation to each prevailing medical theory along the way.
The second half is more clinical, focusing on the research that came from NIMH and the way politics, society and science amalgamate. Farley shines a 1,000-watt beam of hindsight on this history, illuminating shortcomings, double standards and tragically self-deceptive beliefs that directly impacted an untold number of people.
Farley's book is truly a case of reality being stranger than fiction, a highly researched yet readable account of a shocking piece of U.S. history that doesn't show up in textbooks.