I have recently finished a wonderful, much under-read novel by Wilkie Collins titled Poor Miss Finch that focuses on a mysterious pair of identical twin brothers who court one beautiful girl in one small village in East Sussex, UK, and, thus, got inspired to write this post. It is the continuation of my previous post – “Double Trouble”: 7 Books That Focus on Identical Twins, where I talked about works of such authors as Christopher Priest and Hanya Yanagihara, and since that time have read a number of other books about twins. Though identical twins as side characters are more or less a well-known, permanent fixture in literature (Harry Potter, Gone With the Wind), there are actually some great books out there that have them as intriguing lead characters, too.

Poor Miss Finch [1872]
Inspired by his own short story The Twin Sisters [1852], Wilkie Collins wrote Poor Miss Finch in 1872. The tale is about one strong-willed French woman, Madam Pratolungo, who becomes a companion to a beautiful blind girl living apart from her extended family in a small village of Dimchurch in East Sussex. This girl, Lucilla, falls in love with a dashing young man Oscar Dubourg, but he has a more confident and outspoken identical twin brother Nugent, who may also have strong feelings for Lucilla. When Oscar’s appearance changes, and there is also a prospect that Lucilla may recover her sight, Nugent senses that it may be time to make his move. The plot revolves around one preposterous turn of events and there is some melodrama, but this is still a fine page-turner of a novel with vivid characters (including little “vagabond” girl Jicks and eccentric doctor Herr Grosse), bold themes, and delicious psychological aspect of a rivalry between two very different brothers.

The Comedy of Errors [1623]
Partly based on Plautus’ Menaechmi, The Comedy of Errors is a curious early five-act comedy by Shakespeare where two men (Antipholus and his slave Dromio) lost their identical twin brothers in infancy and search for them only for the lost men to end in the same place as Antipholus and Dromio do some years after – Ephesus. In addition, they also live under the same names, causing instances of confusion and mistaken identity in the place. Shakespeare’s other famous play Twelfth Night also focuses on twinship and mistaken identities as the story centres on Viola and her fraternal twin brother Sebastian.

The Old Capital [1962]
This is another classic book about twins that is worth all the attention. Yasunari Kawabata tells a delicate tale of one twin sister, Chieko, once adopted by shopkeepers, slowly realising the existence of another twin she has as the two find each other after years of separation. The setting is Kyoto, Japan, rich in history and tradition, providing a perfect backdrop for this tale of coming to terms with the past and realising its implications for the present and future. Kawabata weaved into this tale much symbolism and longing. This book also formed part of my post Imagining Menus from Books.

On the Black Hill [1982]
“Because they knew each other’s thoughts, they even quarrelled without speaking.” Bruce Chatwin is probably best known as a writer of travel book In Patagonia [1977], but he also penned a number of novels, and this tale is about inseparable, unmarried twin brothers Lewis and Benjamin Jones, living quietly on a farm on the border between England and Wales. This is an evocative book about one secluded way of life dictated by nature and hard work, as Chatwin pays a special tribute to the beauty of the countryside and to the rural life as yet unaffected by industrialisation.

Wise Children [1991]
Inspired by Shakespearean plays (including Twelfth Night and Hamlet), this fiction by Angela Carter is about twins Dora and Nora Chance, chorus girls and illegitimate daughters of a Shakespearean actor. They make their first steps on stage, and decide to monetize on their twinship to get ahead in a theatrical community. Amidst the hardship and the turmoil of that time (Britain of the 1920s, 1930s, 1940s), they can be sure of one thing: their unwavering devotion to each other. This is a fun, in part nostalgic, book of a family drama that gets progressively crazier with each chapter.

The Poisonwood Bible [1998]
This may not be a novel when one thinks: “books about twins”, but Barbara Kingsolver crafted one memorable set of twins there, who are part of Priest Nathan Price’s family: Leah and Adah. The story takes place in the late 1950s/early 1960s in Belgian Congo, where the missionary family of Nathan Price now resides. The multiple characters’ perspective means that we soon get “inside the head” of each of the family members who all have to come to terms with their new environment and challenges of the place so remote and so unlike their home back in the US. Twin sisters Leah and Adah are different (Leah being an idealistic tomboy, and Adah – a bookworm with disability), but their twinship still elicits wonder, curiosity and some disturbance in the story largely thanks to Adah’s exceptional powers of observation.

One Out of Two [1994/2016]
Daniel Sada (1953-2011) was a well-known Mexican writer and poet, and his slim novella One Out of Two (Una de dos) is about one duo of inseparable twin sisters, seamstresses Gloria and Constitución. They trick a man into dating them both, but all fun things soon come to an end as jealousy and vanity resurface in the sisters’ once close relationship, and their lifetime “oneness” comes into question. Sada was much admired for his inventive use of Spanish, and though this translation by Katherine Silver does capture some of the author’s playfulness, it is the story’s themes and symbolism that would perhaps appeal more to an English-speaking reader. This is one quirky little work of some interestings insights into duality, mirages, identity, and sisterly affection.
Being a fraternal twin myself (having a twin brother), I generally find books about twins irresistible, and have also read some other exciting thrillers about twins, but because twinship there was part of a plot twist, I have decided to leave them out for now. What about you? Do you like reading novels about twins or maybe doppelgängers? What particular psychological aspect do you think they bring to a plot? Do you have other book examples?


I’d forgotton the twins in Poisonwood Bible. Another is Brat Farrar by Josephine Tey.
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I will have to check out Brat Farrar, thanks!
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A really splendid list, Diana, thanks! Sadly, though living in the Black Mountains where the novel is set I’ve yet to read On the Black Hill (though I have read a couple of his novellas – Utz and The Viceroy of Ouidah). I also have a copy of the Angela Carter title among a handful I’ve yet to tackle.
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Thanks! Oh, then I imagine you’ll like On the Black Hill. I do want to check out Chatwin’s other novels. I wonder how they compare.
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I wonder if it would be worth tracking down the book Twins by Bari Wood which was the inspiration for Cronenberg’s movie « Dead Ringers » which always pops into my mind when identical twins are mentioned. And then of course the twins in The Shining.
My mother had an identical twin Aunt Bette so it was a big part of my life…..
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That’s interesting you had someone in your family who was a twin. I imagine it is a little bit like a world (twinship) within a world (family). I guess Wood’s book has all the crazy stuff that’s in the movie though the book reviews are not encouraging. I find it incredible that the characters of the film are actually based on real identical twin gynecologists – Cyril and Stewart Marcus, whose lives were covered by NYT at some point and before the publication of Wood’s novel. Apparently, they also died together and relatively young under mysterious circumstances. I love films about identical twins too, mostly classics like The Dark Mirror, A Stolen Life. Dead Ringer (1964) again with Bette Davis is a gem.
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I’ve read a few books about identical twins. One title that I remember is “Her Fearful Symmetry” by Audrey Niffenegger, which was very good (despite the magical bits). There was one I read many years ago but can’t remember the title or the author. The two sisters decide to switch places – one is a Chef in Paris and the other is a housewife in the US. When the housewife somehow dies after arriving in Paris, the Chef tries to keep the secret from her brother-in-law and kids. Very unlikely, but I do remember one thing. When the Chef sees her sister’s kitchen, and the mess she’s got there, she recalls that the first lesson she learned at the Cordon Bleu was “clean up as you go” which I’ve tried to live by ever since!
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I have to track down Her Fearful Symmetry, thanks for this recommendation! And that other book sounds fun, too, despite its shocking element. I have a soft spot for novels that involve food or cooking. This second story of yours also sounds similar to Dead Ringer (1964) film I recommend above where a woman also impersonates her (much richer) twin after her death. It never works out in fiction, does it?
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Actually, it wouldn’t work out in real life, either. Sure, identical twins are very much alike, and sometimes totally indistinguishable when they’re young. But they still tend to have things about them that are slightly different. Plus, they tend to get increasingly identifiable features as they get older.
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Sure thing, no question about it. A brief mistaken identity and only when they’re quite young and by people who don’t really know them is quite feasible now and then. You also hear some crazy stuff happening, but all this is quite rare, I imagine. The closest thing I heard of to this scenario is one twin who actually sat two exams for another taking his ID and actually got away with it.
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An interesting list! I am keen to read more Wilke Collins and Poor Miss Finch sounds like a good candidate. The Poisonwood Bible is also on my TBR, I didn’t know in included a pair of twins.
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Thanks! And, yes, The Poisonwood Bible does and is almost perfect. Only the last seventy pages or so are the let down. Poor Miss Finch is also enjoyable, even if my favourite Wilkie Collins still remains novel No Name.
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What a splendid list of books. Interesting to find Bruce Chatwin’s name in there. I am now keen to read the ones I haven’t read. Thank you.
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Twins always fascinated me. And I have an aunt and uncle who are twins. Very peculiar dynamics between the two of them
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There is some magic in twins. I have known several pairs of twins. They usually have very complicated relationships, and there is a certain repetition of events. I think that the phenomenon of twins has not yet been fully explored – we are still waiting for many discoveries. Therefore, it is especially interesting to read fictional stories about them.
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Yes, definitely, one of the mysteries of this universe and humankind, hence the ongoing fascination!
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