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  • Published: 16 September 2025
  • ISBN: 9780241785379
  • Imprint: Allen Lane
  • Format: Trade Paperback
  • Pages: 368
  • RRP: $36.99

Indignity

A Life Reimagined





The acclaimed author of Free returns with an imaginative investigation into dignity and historical injustice through the story of a family

When Lea Ypi discovers a photo of her grandmother, Leman, honeymooning in the Alps in 1941 posted by a stranger on social media, she is faced with unsettling questions. Growing up, she was told records of her grandmother’s youth were destroyed in the early days of communism in Albania. But there Leman was with her husband, Asllan Ypi: glamorous newlyweds while World War II raged.

What follows is a thrilling reimagining of the past, as we are transported to the vanished world of Ottoman aristocracy, the making of modern Greece and Albania, a global financial crisis, the horrors of war and the dawn of communism in the Balkans. While investigating the truth about her family, Ypi grapples with uncertainty. Who is the real Leman Ypi? What made her move to Tirana as a young woman and marry a socialist who sympathized with the Popular Front while his father led a collaborationist government? And why was she smiling in the winter of 1941?

By turns epic and intimate, profound and gripping, Indignity explores what it means to survive in an age of extremes. It reveals the fragility of truth, both personal and political, and the cost of decisions made against the tide of history. Through secret police reports of communist spies, court depositions, and Ypi’s memories of her grandmother, we move between present and past, archive and imagination, fact and fiction. Ultimately, she asks, what do we really know about the people closest to us? And with what moral authority do we judge the acts of previous generations?

  • Published: 16 September 2025
  • ISBN: 9780241785379
  • Imprint: Allen Lane
  • Format: Trade Paperback
  • Pages: 368
  • RRP: $36.99

About the author

Lea Ypi

Lea Ypi is a professor of Political Theory at the London School of Economics. Her first trade book, Free was shortlisted for the Baillie Gifford Prize, the Costa Biography Award and the Slightly Foxed Best First Biography Prize. It is being translated into nineteen languages.

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Praise for Indignity

A captivating journey, of imagination and of longing, and a gentle uncovering of a deep buried history

Philippe Sands

A 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 Funder

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 Runciman
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