What happens after the pink cloud fades? Tiffany Jenkins has the answers—and they’re raw, real, and ridiculously relatable.

When the PR rep from Random House slid into my inbox offering an early copy of Tiffany Jenkins’ latest memoir, A Clean Mess, I nearly dislocated my clicker finger hitting “YES.” I’ve been a Tiffany Jenkins fan since High Achiever—a title I reviewed ages ago for our OG #QUITLIT Library. Here’s the link if you missed it. That book was gripping, gritty, and hilarious—and I’m happy to report her follow-up is just as binge-worthy.
But A Clean Mess isn’t about getting clean. It’s about staying clean. It’s the brutally honest, often hilarious, occasionally heartbreaking saga of what comes after the mugshot fades and the sober chips stack up. Think less “drugs and jail” and more “marriage, motherhood, anxiety, betrayal, and two pink lines”—all without the crutches, numbing agents, or distractions we once leaned on like lifelines.
🛑 Real Talk: Sobriety is just the beginning
Jenkins opens the memoir with a gut-punch of a text from her husband—the kind that makes you re-read it ten times and feel your stomach drop each time. That moment sets off a chain reaction in her life that’s messier, more chaotic, and way more complex than her early recovery. And isn’t that just so real? Anyone can quit for a day, a week, even a year. But life doesn’t stop just because we put down the bottle or the pills.
What Jenkins nails—like, nails—is how sobriety doesn’t grant immunity from pain, betrayal, or chaos. It just hands us a front-row seat without the buffer. And somehow, she makes it funny. Her knack for mixing grit with grace, pain with punchlines, is what makes this book sing.
📖 This is the story I’ve been waiting for
If High Achiever was her rock-bottom redemption arc, A Clean Mess is the sequel we didn’t know we needed: the how-the-hell-do-you-stay-sober-when-life-gets-lifey guidebook. It’s the memoir version of sitting across from a fellow sober bestie, coffee in hand, venting about parenting sober, choosing yourself in a shaky marriage, and learning how to actually feel things after years of numbness.
We don’t talk enough about what happens after the rehab montage ends. That’s where the real work begins. And Tiffany? She shows up for it, messy bun, smeared mascara, and all.
📚 The Verdict
A Clean Mess is a must-have for your at-home sober library. Whether you’re newly sober, ten years deep, or just sober curious and sniffing around the edges, this book delivers what so many recovery memoirs skip—what happens next.
We need more of these stories. Not just “how I got sober,” but “how I stayed sober when sh*t hit the fan.” Tiffany Jenkins doesn’t just tell you how she made it through. She invites you into the chaos and shows you there’s beauty in the broken pieces.
#QUITLIT Sobees Score: 4.5 out of 5

Buy it. Read it. Highlight it. Then hand it to a sober sister and say, “You’re gonna need this.”
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#SoberCurator #RecoveryIsRad #ACleanMess #TiffanyJenkins #SoberAF #ReadThisNow

#QUITLIT: High Achiever By Tiffany Jenkins Is The Recovery Memoir You Will Want To Add To Your #QUITLIT Library Right Now

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SOBER POP CULTURE at The Sober Curator is where mainstream trends meet the vibrant world of sobriety. We serve up a mix of movie, podcast, fashion, and book recommendations alongside alcohol-free cocktails, celebrity features, and pop culture buzz—all with a sober twist.
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1. What is A Clean Mess about?
A Clean Mess by Tiffany Jenkins is a recovery memoir that blends humor and honesty as it explores grief, healing, trauma, relationships, and life after addiction.
2. Who is Tiffany Jenkins?
Tiffany Jenkins is an author and journalist whose work focuses on recovery, grief, mental health, and personal reinvention. A Clean Mess is her deeply personal memoir.
3. What genre is A Clean Mess?
The book is considered quit lit — a nonfiction genre centered on recovery, addiction memoirs, and personal transformation. It’s also a memoir of grief and healing.
4. What are the main themes in A Clean Mess?
Key themes include addiction and recovery, processing grief and loss, confronting trauma, rebuilding identity, and finding humor and resilience in hard moments.
5. Is A Clean Mess suitable for people in recovery?
Yes — many readers in recovery find it resonant and relatable due to its honest portrayal of healing, setbacks, and emotional complexity. However, people should approach any memoir with self-care.
6. What makes this book different from other recovery memoirs?
Tiffany Jenkins’ voice balances sharp humor with emotional depth. Unlike many recovery books that focus solely on sobriety, A Clean Mess also tackles grief, parenting, body image, and reinvention.
7. Does the book offer practical advice or mostly storytelling?
It is primarily a personal narrative. While it offers insight and empathy, its strength is in lived experience rather than structured recovery advice.
8. Who might enjoy this book besides people in recovery?
Readers who appreciate memoirs about loss, humor, personal reinvention, and honest storytelling will enjoy A Clean Mess — even outside recovery contexts.
9. Where can I find A Clean Mess?
The book is available through major booksellers such as Amazon, independent bookstores, and libraries.





