Piece image

Identical Twins

Series: Radio Curious
From: Barry Vogel
Length: 00:29:00

Embed_button
Radio Curious speaks with Saul Diskin, author of “The End of the Twins, a Memoir of Losing a Brother,” a book about being an identical twin. Read the full description.

Radio-curious-logosmall_small Ever wondered what it would be like to have an identical twin—how alike would you be to that person? How much of an individual would you be? Saul Diskin and his identical twin brother Marty grew up together in New York City where Saul and Marty were inseparable. As adults, they began to live separate lives, Saul in Phoenix and Marty near Boston. In 1991, Marty, who had suffered from leukemia for 20 years, needed a bone marrow transplant, which he received from Saul. In his extraordinarily intimate book, “The End of the Twins, a Memoir of Losing a Brother,” Saul Diskin chronicles the rich relationship beginning with their early childhood and ending well past Marty’s death in 1997, shortly before their 63rd birthday.

Saul Diskin recommends “Entwined Lives,” by Nancy Segal and “Cosmology and Creation: The Spiritual Significance of Contemporary Cosmology” by Paul Brockelman.

Originally Broadcast: September 22, 2001

Also in the Radio Curious series

Piece image

Music and Thought: Pushing The Limits (00:29:01)
From: Barry Vogel

Trimpin, is the star of the movie that bears his name, which will be shown at the Mendocino Film Festival. He was the recipient of a Mac Arthur genius grant in 1997 for the ...
Piece image

The Film Maker’s film: Following Sean… Technique and Life’s Stories (00:29:01)
From: Barry Vogel

Film maker, Ralph Arlyck, made the movie Following Sean. It traces the life a 4 year old pot smoking child of hippie parents beginning in San Francisco in 1969. It was as ...
Piece image

The United Auto Workers Union: Its Effect on America (00:29:02)
From: Barry Vogel

Radio Curious discusses “Brothers on the Line” a film about the Reuther brothers who unionized the auto industry and galvanized the middle class. Their descendant Sasha ...
Piece image

The Primate Within Us (00:29:02)
From: Barry Vogel

Radio Curious discusses the close relationship we humans have with other primates, with Dario Maestriprieri, author of “Games Primate Play: An Undercover Investigation of the ...
Piece image

A Fallen Tree Ruptures Cliff and Damages a Creek: Watershed Restoration Repairs It (00:29:01)
From: Barry Vogel

Watershed restoration is the topic of this week’s Radio Curious. Host and Producer Barry Vogel speaks with volunteers at Gibson Creek in Ukiah, California. They restored a ...
Piece image

Bombing of Environmental Crusaders: "Who Bombed Judi Bari?" (00:29:02)
From: Barry Vogel

Radio Curious Assistant Producer, Christina Aanestad speaks with Darryl Cherney, the Earth First! activist who along with Judi Bari, was car bombed in Oakland, California in ...
Piece image

Bush & Cheney: Did They Cheat Justice? (00:29:02)
From: Barry Vogel

Radio Curious speaks with Elizabeth Holtzman, a former congresswoman, former District Attorney of Brooklyn, New York and author of Cheating Justice: How Bush and Cheney ...
Piece image

When Journalism is Neither Fair or Accurate (00:29:01)
From: Barry Vogel

Who gets to be in the media and who doesn’t? That’s the topic of Radio Curious in a conversation with Jeff Cohen, co-founder of FAIR-Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting. We ...
Piece image

A Visit With a Free Black Women - Boston 1840 (00:29:02)
From: Barry Vogel

Radio Curious brings you an archived interview with Maria Stewart, as portrayed by scholar, Sandra Kamusakiri. Stewart was a free black woman who lived in the early 1800's ...
Piece image

The Vagina Monologues (00:29:00)
From: Barry Vogel

Radio Curious revisits a 2004 conversation with Eve Ensler, creator of "The Vagina Monologue," for Women's History Month.

Piece Description

Ever wondered what it would be like to have an identical twin—how alike would you be to that person? How much of an individual would you be? Saul Diskin and his identical twin brother Marty grew up together in New York City where Saul and Marty were inseparable. As adults, they began to live separate lives, Saul in Phoenix and Marty near Boston. In 1991, Marty, who had suffered from leukemia for 20 years, needed a bone marrow transplant, which he received from Saul. In his extraordinarily intimate book, “The End of the Twins, a Memoir of Losing a Brother,” Saul Diskin chronicles the rich relationship beginning with their early childhood and ending well past Marty’s death in 1997, shortly before their 63rd birthday.

Saul Diskin recommends “Entwined Lives,” by Nancy Segal and “Cosmology and Creation: The Spiritual Significance of Contemporary Cosmology” by Paul Brockelman.

Originally Broadcast: September 22, 2001

Related Website

www.radiocurious.org