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Praise for Identical Strangers:
Winner of a Books for a Better Life Award
“Remarkable . . . powerful . . . [an] extraordinary experience . . . The reader is left to marvel at the reworking of individual identities required by one discovery and then another.”
–Boston Sunday Globe
“[A] poignant memoir of twin sisters who were split up as infants, became part of a secret scientific study, then found each other as adults.”
–Reader’s Digest (Editors’ Choice)
“[A] fascinating memoir . . . Weaving studies about twin science into their personal reflections . . . Schein and Bernstein provide an intelligent exploration of how identity intersects with bloodlines. A must-read for anyone interested in what it means to be a family.”
–Bust
“Identical Strangers has all the heart-stopping drama you’d expect. But it has so much more–the authors’ emotional honesty and clear-eyed insights turn this unique story into a universal one. As you accompany the twins on their search for the truth of their birth, you witness another kind of birth–the germination and flowering of sisterly love.”
–Deborah Tannen, author of You’re Wearing That?
Excerpted from Identical Strangers by Elyse Schein Copyright © 2008 by Elyse Schein. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
1. Identical Strangers delves into the age-old question of nature versus nurture. What conclusions does the book draw, if any? Has it changed the way you view the issue?
2. Paula and Elyse discuss the ways in which twins receive special attention in our society. Do you think twins have a special relationship? Why or why not would you want to be a twin?
3. Viola Bernard felt certain that twins would develop better senses of identity if they were raised separately. Even if you don’t agree with her, do you think there is any validity to her claim?
4. “Thank God she is not my carbon copy” (p. 51). When they first meet as adults, Paula and Elyse are both relieved that they are not exactly identical in appearance or personality. How do you think you would react meeting your double for the first time?
5. Paula and Elyse each deal with the news of discovering she has an identical twin differently. How do you think you would react if you were in their situation?
6. “Once we separate today, I worry that my twin will vanish again” (p. 68), Paula writes after their first meeting. Soon after, she writes “I sometimes wish that [Elyse] hadn’t found me” (p. 128). Can you understand Paula’s ambivalence about her relationship with Elyse?
7. “I would like a better word to describe my relationship to Leda,” writes Elyse. “Suddenly it occurs to me that Leda is not my mother, she is our mother” (p. 244). Do you think there is an adequate word to describe the sisters’ relationship to Leda?
8. Mr. Witt seems reluctant to meet with Paulaand Elyse. Can you understand his hesitance? Do you consider him to be their “uncle”?
9. Has Identical Strangers changed your views on adoption? If so, how?
10. Were you surprised by how well Paula and Elyse’s families got along when they met? How do you imagine you’d react if you found out your adopted child was a twin? What action would you take, if any?
11. Project into the future. How do you think Paula and Elyse’s relationship will develop after the story ends?
1. Identical Strangers delves into the age-old question of nature versus nurture. What conclusions does the book draw, if any? Has it changed the way you view the issue?
2. Paula and Elyse discuss the ways in which twins receive special attention in our society. Do you think twins have a special relationship? Why or why not would you want to be a twin?
3. Viola Bernard felt certain that twins would develop better senses of identity if they were raised separately. Even if you don’t agree with her, do you think there is any validity to her claim?
4. “Thank God she is not my carbon copy” (p. 51). When they first meet as adults, Paula and Elyse are both relieved that they are not exactly identical in appearance or personality. How do you think you would react meeting your double for the first time?
5. Paula and Elyse each deal with the news of discovering she has an identical twin differently. How do you think you would react if you were in their situation?
6. “Once we separate today, I worry that my twin will vanish again” (p. 68), Paula writes after their first meeting. Soon after, she writes “I sometimes wish that [Elyse] hadn’t found me” (p. 128). Can you understand Paula’s ambivalence about her relationship with Elyse?
7. “I would like a better word to describe my relationship to Leda,” writes Elyse. “Suddenly it occurs to me that Leda is not my mother, she is our mother” (p. 244). Do you think there is an adequate word to describe the sisters’ relationship to Leda?
8. Mr. Witt seems reluctant to meet with Paula and Elyse. Can you understand his hesitance? Do you consider him to be their “uncle”?
9. Has Identical Strangers changed your views on adoption? If so, how?
10. Were you surprised by how well Paula and Elyse’s families got along when they met? How do you imagine you’d react if you found out your adopted child was a twin? What action would you take, if any?
11. Project into the future. How do you think Paula and Elyse’s relationship will develop after the story ends?
Anonymous
Posted July 17, 2008
I could not stop reading this book -- devoured it in a weekend. This is not just an analysis of the twin relationship or of adoption practice. Nor is it a typical narrative. It is a riveting personal story, like a diary, honestly told by two people suddenly faced with a stunningly unique challenge to their notions of what it means to be 'me.' The personal nature of the storytelling is what gripped me -- at times a bit ragged, at times emotionally inconsistent, and with twists and turns no novelist would dare invent. It's very real, and I often found myself wishing i could just go have coffee with Paula and Elyse to hear their latest. They are remarkably introspective people who question rather than just accept.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted November 4, 2007
I was happily surprised by not only the warmth and charm of the story and writing but also the educational value. They have definitely done their homework about twins- and I was delighted not only to come out having read a fascinating story but also having learned a lot about the lives of twins. Elyse and Paula's made it easy to understand what they must have been feeling throughout incredible and unlikely circumstances and held nothing back to help us understand the roller coaster events of the reunion
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted March 9, 2011
i enjoyed this from start to finish. such a heart felt story! what an amazing journey!!
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted March 21, 2010
I did not care for this book. In fact, I didn't even finish it. I kept thinking that it just had to get better, but it didn't. I got half way through and it just wasn't holding my interest. The cover and title made it sound much easier reading. I do not recommend it.
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Posted March 30, 2008
Identical Strangers was a Christmas gift from my own identical twin, with whom I share an uncommonly close bond ... and a lifetime of mistaken identity. Thus, I absorbed this book with emotional incongruity. While I deplore sibling-separation, and though I mourn the authors' sisterless childhoods and lost early closeness, I see a compensating consolation in each being raised as her own person in her own defined space. The book's alternating-author format propelled me to its poignant finale in one sitting. In addition to the story itself, many aspects of Elyse's and Paula's personalities interested me, such as their sleuthing chutzpah, their initiative, persistence, varying moods, and differing reactions. I also appreciated the book's related genetic facts and information. To connect with this story, one needn't be an adoptee, a twin, or even a sibling. There's infinite appeal in its universal secondary theme: Identity. The precise mix of biology, environment, timing and all other factors that make each individual profoundly unique, even those sharing identical DNA, remains as complex as it is intriguing.
0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted March 10, 2008
As someone who has helped adoptees find their biological parents, is the wife of an adoptee and is the author of a number of books about ethics, I had a special interest in this book. And it met with all my (high) expectations. In short, it was terrific -- well-written, engaging and thought-provoking. The authors deal with all sides of several important issues, from the emotional repercussions and rewards of finding one's biological roots and relatives to the ethical issues of medical research and perspective, especially the issue of separting twins (which would include separating other siblings, too). Whether you agree with the authors or not on these issues, their book is a fabulous springboard for discussion in book clubs, classroom settings and among friends and relatives. For anyone considering doing a similar search or helping someone search for their roots, it is a good resource. In short, I highly recommend reading it and can't wait to see the movie!
0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted January 28, 2008
I found this book very interesting and liked the alternating chapters by the two authors on the audio version. In addition to describing the emotions of the identical twins separated during infancy and reunited at age 35, scientific information on multiple births is presented. The ethics of the prestigious New York adoption agency that made the decision to separate twins and triplets is examined. The sisters' detective work in discovering their origins is also detailed.
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Posted January 12, 2011
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Posted March 23, 2011
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Posted December 29, 2010
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Posted January 25, 2010
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Overview
Elyse Schein had always known she was adopted, but it wasn’t until her mid-thirties while living in Paris that she searched for her biological mother. What she found instead was shocking: She had an identical twin sister. What’s more, after being separated as infants, she and her sister had been, for a time, part of a secret study on separated twins.Paula Bernstein, a married writer and mother living in New York, also knew she was adopted, but had no inclination to find her birth mother. When she answered a call from her adoption agency one spring afternoon, Paula’s life suddenly divided into two starkly different periods: the time before and the time ...