Higher Sobriety
my years without booze
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- $13.99
Publisher Description
What happened next? It’s the question Jill Stark has been asked most often since the publication of her acclaimed memoir, High Sobriety.
As one of the original pioneers in the ‘quit lit’ space, Jill started a national conversation about the role of alcohol in our lives, turning the lens on her own rocky relationship with booze and forensically dissecting the culture that gave rise to it.
Now, ten years after the book’s first release, she fills in the gaps on where life took her after she unwittingly became the poster girl for sobriety. In this updated edition, Jill charts her struggle to become a moderate drinker, the crippling ‘hangxiety’ that led to her quitting alcohol for good, and the ever-evolving journey of self-discovery sobriety has taken her on.
Surviving six long lockdowns alcohol-free, Jill also looks at how a global pandemic tested her sobriety and shone a spotlight on the way alcohol has been sold as the panacea for all our troubles. At the same time, it helped accelerate a seismic change in the nation’s drinking habits, with the rise of the sober-curious movement and a booming non-alcoholic drinks industry proving there is a growing appetite for abstinence.
After so long feeling like a social pariah, Jill embraces the joy of living life on the outer, and meets a new generation of sober rebels who are radically redefining what it means to be alcohol-free. Now she feels prompted to ask the question, has sobriety become cool?
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Journalist Stark (Happy Never After) chronicles a year of sobriety in this witty memoir. She shares how she started binge drinking as a teenager in Scotland and continued after moving to Australia, where she reported on the "nation's drinking habits" for The Age while maintaining a hard-partying lifestyle. At age 35, a grueling New Year's Day hangover convinced her to quit alcohol for a year. Her health rebounded even as she discovered that staying on the wagon complicated her social and dating life, as when her friend declined to accompany her to a rooftop bar, saying, "I just don't like the idea of being out of control when you're in control." Stark also feared that going on dates sober would be "dispassionate" before she came to appreciate the greater clarity she gained from viewing potential partners "without my beer goggles." Though she began drinking in moderation after her year of sobriety ended, she eventually returned to complete abstinence, finding that "it's easier than moderation." Despite a slew of clichés, the humor lands ("Teetotalism is a crime punishable by death" in her native Scotland), and Stark's candid reflections reveal the outsize role booze plays in many people's social lives. It's a spirited tale of kicking addiction.