Helena de Bres is an Associate Professor of Philosophy at Wellesley College, where she researches and teaches ethics, philosophy of literature and political theory. She is the author of Artful Truths: The Philosophy of Memoir (2021). Helena has published essays in The New York Times, The Point, Aeon, Psyche, Brevity, The Los Angeles Review and Another Chicago Magazine. She is on the editorial board of The Raven, a new magazine of philosophical essays. Julia de Bres is a freelance illustrator and a Senior Lecturer in Linguistics at Massey University. She analyses how minority groups use language to resist social inequalities and illustrates the results of her research. She lives in Wellington, New Zealand.
‘Stunning ... In fluid prose, de Bres gracefully clarifies philosophical notions for the lay reader, and her own observations as an identical twin invigorate the book's emotional center while leaving room for the many unsolved mysteries of identity, kinship, and closeness. This will challenge the way readers see the world.’ Publishers Weekly ‘A collection of engaging essays about binarization, identity, love, free will, objectification, and the depiction and understanding of twins in literature, art, philosophy, psychology, and popular culture ... A thoughtful, well-rendered collection of musings on identity.’ Kirkus Reviews ‘This study of twinhood sits at the intersection of the intellectual and the personal – philosopher Helena de Bres is a twin herself, attuned to the uncanniness of being a twin as both a scholar and a sister.’ The Millions ‘Lucid, curious, and deeply felt, How to be multiple is a work of philosophy, an autobiography of twindom, and a captivating exploration of selfhood. Most of us are not twins, but we all know duality, and de Bres uses her exceptional condition as a lens to examine what makes us distinct and what we all share. What a fun, gorgeous book.’ Melissa Febos, National Book Critics Circle Award-winning author of Girlhood and Body Work ‘Helena de Bres has written a brilliant, surprising, and philosophically complex exploration of what it means to be a twin, but more than that – she's written a book that has transformed my understanding of what it means to be both one-of-a-kind and intimately connected to another human being. Profoundly illuminating, insightful, funny, and moving – How to be multiple is a must-read.’ Chloé Cooper Jones, author of Easy Beauty ‘What is it like to be an identical twin? To know someone with such uncanny intimacy? To see another possible life with your genes played out? De Bres raises so many thrillingly mind-bending existential questions that she convinces you that twinship is a crucial key to understanding how we love and who we are.’ Larissa MacFarquhar, author of Strangers Drowning -- .