I’m being generous giving this a 5, but hey - it’s Christmas, I read the bulk of this book in one sitting on a flight to Hong Kong, and I really enjoyed it.
Sure, the style can be a bit simplistic (and I’m not a huge fan of the personal memoir-type format anyway) - but the stories Yanis Varoufakis tells in ‘Raise Your Soul’ are remarkable. I should preface by saying that I’ve not read other books by Varoufakis (though, like many readers, I’m familiar with his work and I was attracted to this book by the name) - but I gather this one is quite different from his others. In simplistic terms, Varoufakis uses this book to tell the stories of five women in his life - both grandmothers; his mother; his ex-grandmother-in-law (if that’s even a thing?); and his partner. Yet ‘Raise Your Soul’ is so much more than that. From Egypt to Athens, the Greek Civil War to the Financial Crisis, Varoufakis’ family were at the frontline of some tortured periods in Greece’s history - and this book offers a fascinating speed run through that same history using the eyes of the people who lived it. I thought Varoufakis’ idea of trying to re-centre women who had been disenfranchised throughout their lives was a nice one - but this book gets home on the quality of those stories alone.
Part memoir, part history, this book is enjoyable, emotional, and has a readability that belies the force of its content.