A clean mess A memoir of sobriety after a lifetime of being numb

Tiffany Jenkins

Book - 2025

"After a brutal struggle with opioid addiction that landed her four months in prison, Tiffany was ready for a fresh start. What she didn't expect was just how fast life would happen once she was out of prison. She went from felon to married, sober mom of three in just two years. But life doesn't stop happening; her marriage collapsed a few years later, a crisis that forced her reckoning with the foundations of her mental health and sobriety. As she forged her future, Tiffany learned to feel emotions and live life without numbing herself with drugs. She had to figure out how to be a mom, how to have a career, how to be married, how to get divorced, how to be an adult, and how to have feelings all at the same time. With dark hu...mor and page-turning storytelling, she shows how she learned to survive when her crutches and band aids were taken away from her, and the gratitude and peace she found on the other side of addiction."--

Saved in:
1 person waiting
1 copy ordered
Subjects
Genres
Biography
Autobiographies
Published
New York, NY : Harmony [2025]
Language
English
Main Author
Tiffany Jenkins (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
292 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780593232637
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Jenkins takes readers on a rollicking ride-along through her addiction and recovery in the moving and darkly comic follow-up to High Achiever. In 2013, after Jenkins completed stints in jail and rehab for stealing to pay for drugs, she joined a halfway house, found work in her recovery program, and started serving probation. Then, in rapid succession, she met her husband, had a child, and started raising a family. Suddenly stable and sober, Jenkins sought help from a therapist after her husband broke his own sobriety. Their sessions helped Jenkins understand her addictions as covers for feelings of inadequacy and anxiety--particularly related to fears that she and her husband weren't compatible. As Jenkins grappled with the possibility of ending her marriage, her father was diagnosed with terminal cancer, throwing her life further out of whack. Jenkins's raw reflections have the rueful quality of diary entries ("During the years I should have been learning to save money, file taxes, and pay bills, I was stuck on a train to nowhere"). Throughout, she avoids facile empowerment messages while still providing hope for those lingering near rock bottom. This inspires. (June)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved