Available Formats
Early Sobrieties
By (Author) Michael Deagler
Cornerstone
Penguin (Cornerstone)
12th August 2025
1st May 2025
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
813.6
Paperback
272
Width 130mm, Height 198mm, Spine 17mm
195g
A raw and striking debut novel about redemption and recovery, from an exciting new literary voice. 'Suberb . . . vivid' TELEGRAPH 'The arrival of a writer of considerable gifts' TLS 'Michael Deagler is the real deal . . . a truly intelligent work from a clearly intelligent writer' PERCIVAL EVERETT 'Illuminating and moving' AIMEE BENDER *** Dennis Monk is about to spend his first summer sober. At twenty-six he is ready to re-join sensible adult life, but just when Dennis needs stability, his uptight parents kick him out into a world of couch-surfing. Everything around him has changed and everyone he knows seems to be doing better than he is. At every street corner, former classmates, estranged drinking buddies, and prospective lovers threaten to burst the bubble of his recovery. And Dennis Monk is about to learn the difference between getting sober and staying sober in this new world. Early Sobrieties is a devastatingly witty novel about coming of age a second time. Deagler's debut marks the arrival of an astonishing new voice in American fiction.
Michael Deagler is the real deal. This novel is surprising in all the best ways. The actions of the complex and complicated people in this world are not predictable, but always, frighteningly, believable. Deagler writes with great control and understatement. This is a truly intelligent work from a clearly intelligent writer -- Percival Everett, 2023 Windham Campbell Prize recipient and author of Dr. No
Illuminating and movingDeaglers debut pulls in a reader with such an inviting clarity. Theres something about the honesty in this voice that creates a lot of room for the reader to connect, imagine, and feel -- Aimee Bender, author of The Butterfly Lampshade
This is a funny, sad but first of all incredibly soulful novel. It offers an unflinching account of the life which has to be lived in the aftermath of a change of heart. Here is a narrator who is clear-eyed and yet sun-dazzled; born again but as an actual newborn. It will literally make you laugh and it will literally make you cry. -- Aidan Cottrell-Boyce, author of The End of Nightwork
Superb . . . Deagler is very good. His prose is conversational and vivid; his characters talk and act like real people, in constantly surprising and plausible ways; and everything that happens, no matter how low-key or incidental to the plot, has the detailed intricacy of ordinary life -- Benjamin Markovits * Telegraph *
All we have is Monk's peripatetic wanderings and the pleasure of his voice, which is consistently funny and wise . . . There's a sense of dislocation or dissociation in this recovering addict's observations, which Deagler perfectly articulates . . . What makes the novel cohere, and what makes it such a pleasure, is Monk's stream-clear voice and his growing insight into his condition. -- Jude Cook * The Spectator *
Monk is an ideal vehicle for Deagler's fine observational skills . . . refreshing. Early Sobrieties marks the arrival of a writer of considerable gifts . . . His dialogue is as crisp as a virgin mojito and his prose has the buoyant energy of a hangover-free Saturday morning -- Matt Rowland Hill * TLS *
Emotionally raw, often jaded, but still full of wonder, Early Sobrieties is an incredibly funny and tender story. Michael Deagler does a fantastic job of bringing into relief the absurdities of being a young adult and trying to find your place in a changing world -- Craig Finn, songwriter and frontman of The Hold Steady
A luminous and observant debut about all the strangeness of returning to the places that formed you. The prose is spectacular -- Akil Kumarasamy, author of Meet Us by the Roaring Sea
Early Sobrieties is a miracle, a debut of startling beauty, grit, and grace. Cutting into the glow of its lyricism and humor, the awesome glare of undeceived vision illuminates every page -- Greg Jackson, author of The Dimensions of a Cave
Funny, insightful, and, above all, well-written, Early Sobrieties is a pleasure to read. Deagler manages to tell the story of his bewildered and rudderless protagonist in a way that is not rudderless at all, but rather precise and meaningful -- David Sanchez, author of All Day is a Long Time
Michael Deagler's fiction has appeared or is forthcoming in Harper's, McSweeney's Quarterly Concern, Electric Literature's Recommended Reading, and elsewhere. He has received fellowships from the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, MA, and the Kimmel Harding Nelson Center for the Arts in Nebraska City.