- Published: 30 September 2025
- ISBN: 9781847929075
- Imprint: Bodley Head
- Format: Trade Paperback
- Pages: 304
- RRP: $40.00
Raise Your Soul
A Personal History of Resistance
- Published: 30 September 2025
- ISBN: 9781847929075
- Imprint: Bodley Head
- Format: Trade Paperback
- Pages: 304
- RRP: $40.00
Behind every good man there’s a good woman. In Yanis Varoufakis’s case, there are several. Written with a historian’s grasp of events, an economist’s rationalization of how things work, and most of all, a storyteller’s understanding of the human condition, this is not just their story, but ours
Irvine Welsh
Beautiful and inspiring, I couldn't put it down
Rosie Holt
A new book by Yanis Varoufakis, one of the most important political figures of our times, is always momentous
Ken Loach
This is a gripping book - written with compassion and wit - by a uniquely gifted and multi-faceted writer. It’s a history of modern Greece, it’s a biography of an extraordinary family, and sometimes it reads like a thriller. Most of all though it’s a humble homage to the truly unusual women who have moulded and enriched Yanis Varoufakis’s unusual life. I strongly recommend it
Brian Eno
A fierce work tracing Greece’s past century – war, civil war, occupation, dictatorship, resistance – through five of the most powerful women in Varoufakis’s life. ... Five women who tell truths, take risks, and protect family; women who organise – despite illiteracy or social status; women whose resolve shows us how class differences in education, networks, and resources determine collusion or resistance, life or death. To read this book as memoir, biography, or autobiography, however, is to diminish its impact: this is an unmistakably political work that tells your story just as profoundly as it reveals mine. ... Raise Your Soul sits alongside Christos Tsiolkas’s Dead Europe, Marcel Ophuls’s The Sorrow and the Pity, and, of course, Costa-Gavras’s Z ...To sit with Varoufakis’s words is a gift: a masterful writer and orator, his practice champions the interconnectedness of the cultural and the civic
Esther Anatolitis, Australian Book Review