
Indignity
A Life Reimagined
$27.18
- Paperback
368 pages
- Release Date
1 December 2026
Summary
Longlisted for the 2026 Women’s Prize for Non-Fiction
Named a Book of the Year by Financial Times, Sunday Times, Prospect, TLS, Washington Post, *NPR*
“Stunningly multilayered… explores what happens when philosophies meet history, when decisions have to be made at the point of a gun” - Prospect
From the acclaimed author of Free comes an imaginative investigation into histor…
Book Details
| ISBN-13: | 9781802064124 |
|---|---|
| ISBN-10: | 1802064125 |
| Author: | Lea Ypi |
| Publisher: | Penguin Books Ltd |
| Imprint: | Penguin |
| Format: | Paperback |
| Number of Pages: | 368 |
| Release Date: | 1 December 2026 |
| Weight: | 500g |
| Dimensions: | 198mm x 129mm x 35mm |
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What They're Saying
Critics Review
A magical literary feat and one of the most touching books I’ve read this year… It reminded me variously of Kafka and Bulgakov at his most heartbroken – Stuart Jeffries * Spectator *Beguiling and moving… a clever hybrid, happily exploiting all the many possibilities of telling a life story. In the process, not only is the life of an individual described and plotted with great success, but also a form of oblique history of 20th-century Albania is offered, illuminating all its perversities, absurdities and ruthlessness… Ypi has tried in her complex narrative to restore a sense of dignity to her grandmother’s rackety, alternately cursed and fortunate, history-buffeted life… She has triumphantly achieved her objective – William Boyd * Observer *Gripping... evoking the work of Elena Ferrante in its invocations of fevered girlhood, marriage, friendship and intellectual debate in webs of family, class struggle and politics… Both particular and universal, historical and timely… it will stay with me – Elizabeth Graver * The New York Times *A richly reimagined retelling of a life… history brought to life through novelistic style. Suspenseful… thought-provoking – Sami Kent * Guardian *Stunningly multilayered, spans the decline of the Ottoman empire to the rise of fascism in Europe to the Soviet era… On the surface, there is the drama and emotion of Leman’s story. Underneath, there is philosophy, literature, history and more… Indignity explores what happens when philosophies meet history, when decisions have to be made at the point of a gun – Peter Hoskin * Prospect *Remarkable and ambitious… Leman led a life so rich in incident that only a novel could do justice to its complexities, and a novel, of sorts, is exactly what Ypi has written – Becca Rothfeld * Washington Post *A rich account of lives lived inside the gates of history… Part memoir and part historical novel – or, if you will, part imaginative reconstruction of a secret family history – Kevin Power * Irish Times *In Indignity Ypi tells a complicated story engagingly, and fills in many of the gaps left open in Free… A triumph – Jonathan Ree * Literary Review *Virtually unique in English… blending fact and fiction, Ypi sweeps the reader along * Economist *How women struggle to survive in dangerous times is one of the themes of Ypi’s bold new book… Although she has a novelist’s instinct for dramatic incident and psychological nuance, Indignity is very much a philosopher’s book as well, since the different characters embody different attitudes – Kantian, Stoic, Nietzschean, more cynical and pragmatic – to dignity and morality – Matthew Reiz * Times Higher Education *A master class in recovering truth from history, regaining integrity after its wounds, and finding the meaning that time and memory conspire to prevent us from grasping – Michael Ignatieff * Project Syndicate *Really compelling stories… like Gabriel García Márquez at times… riveting – Tom Sutcliffe * Start the Week *To the philosopher’s preoccupation with weighty existential themes Ypi adds the insights of a novelist… For a professional philosopher, Ypi is remarkably well suited for the novelistic craft * Chicago Review of Books *The lack of agreed-upon history in the Balkans makes building anything new impossible. Ypi’s book is an intervention against this oblivion … Her questions force us to reevaluate our own assumptions about the present – Lily Lynch * Jacobin *An experiment with speculative history … Ypi confronts problems of human agency and historical contingency in deceptively simple, accessible prose – Linda Kinstler * TLS *Indignity dissects the concept of freedom, exploring the fragility of truths both personal and political… A meditation on how history is curated, contested and lived * AnOther *Lea Ypi goes deep into Europe’s forgotten past to explore who owns the story of a life and who gets to tell it. A gripping tale of secret police, fractured families and undying loyalties, this is also a remarkable reflection on how history is made and what happens to the people who get left behind – David RuncimanLea Ypi is one of those rare and precious thinkers who illuminate historical truth through the brilliant power of their storytelling. I read Indignity with the same awe I first read Middlemarch and Beloved. A masterpiece – Lyndsey StonebridgeA delicate and powerful reimagining of a life which dignifies both the subject of the book, Ypi’s grandmother, and its author. It is an act of watchful, questing, loving witness, through the turmoil of the fractured Balkans in the mid 20th century. In beautifully reimagined scenes, interspersed with original State Security Service reports in their baleful, banal official-ese, Ypi brings vividly to life human beings making hard decisions and living with the consequences. And she’s able to interrogate the kinds of truths we want from archives—and from life— some of which we’re unlikely to get. Most of all it is Ypi’s own fine and compassionate moral sense of the complexities of human beings that makes this a superb read – Anna FunderA captivating journey, of imagination and of longing, and a gentle uncovering of a deep buried history – Philippe Sands
About The Author
Lea Ypi
Lea Ypi holds the Ralph Miliband Chair in Politics and Philosophy at the London School of Economics. Her first trade book, Free: Coming of Age at the End of History, won the Ondaatje Prize and the Slightly Foxed Best First Biography Prize, and was shortlisted for the Baillie Gifford Prize and the Costa Biography Award. It has been translated into over thirty languages.
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