I’ve been meaning to read this book for a long time and finally got a chance to. This is all due to my inexhaustible fascination with all things circus and sideshow related. I mean, you can’t get more famous in that world than Chang and Eng, the extraordinary Siamese twins. It isn’t just that their cojoined lives produced a famous act, it’s that their lives were so freaking extraordinary by any measure. Granted, this is a fictionalized account, but it is fact based and the facts are fascinating. Two impoverish brothers whose lives take them from the shores of Mekong to the estate in North Carolina. The twins who met royalty, traveled Europe and eventually settled down in the prewar South, married and had 21 kids between them. It’s a storybook of a life, but a sad story in its way. For all of their accomplishments, the challenges of their togetherness were manifold and, in the end, unsurmountable. When one twin died, the other shortly followed. But before that…all the things they’ve done. The way they structured their act, refusing Barnum’s offers, accumulating their own wealth. Establishing themselves in the ever so racist South, marrying white women and surviving a war. Producing 21 kids. That in itself is stunning, especially considering that a lot of these kids were had late in life, well into their 40s, and this was before modern day celebrities redefined acceptable childbearing age. And yes, the Bunker (how Americanized is that alone) twins did have slaves, they lived in the mid 1800s in the South, after all. You can’t just ignore the ugly aspects of history because you’re woke. In fact, one of the most interesting things about the Bunkers in North Carolina was how they integrated into the local life and, in fact, just how Southern they became. Apparently (or at least fictionally) they disliked the North and considered them to be racist. The race thing itself…theirs was very much a singular situation, they weren’t white, but they were free, had money and married white women. Eventually it seems they came to be accepted on a one (well, two) off sort of basis. The outcome of the war and the subsequent emancipation nearly destroyed them financially. And yet touring always managed to help out. Eventually, they came to live in the famous 3 days on 3 days of arrangement splitting their time between two households and two families. So much of their lives was normal by then standards and yet so much was different. Were they happy? That seems to be the question. Did all the possessions and children and accomplishments make them happy? Ever made up for the extraordinary quotidian difficulties of everyday cojoined life? This is where the creative license comes in. And so the story is told from Eng’s perspective, the quiet bookish introvert to his brother’s outgoing jokester. Eng dreams of separation. Dreams of Siam. Dreams of his brother’s wife. Eng’s a dreamer, but his balloon is firmly tethered (literally so) to reality with his brother and can never take flight. Seems like Eng is destined for sadness, the way most dreamers and intellectuals are. Chang’s life seems simpler, more based in small immediate joys, but in the very end his own darkness is revealed. It’s difficult to say what their lives might have been had they been born regular separate twins, certainly smaller, possibly happier, definitely less book worthy. But it is their extraordinary togetherness that makes their story such a compelling and interesting read. This is first and foremost such a well written book. It’s easy to forget this is a fictionalized account, it seems so real, so vivid. The descriptions, the narration…it draws you in completely. A thoroughly immersive reading experience. The chapters alternate between their past and present and I must say the past made for more exciting reading, some of the present with its unrequited longing and the family dramas just didn’t have the same dynamic. But overall, it was a very enjoyable read. Peculiarly slow somehow, it took me much longer to get through than a book of that length normally would, but absolutely worth the time. Recommended.