Away from the cameras, Joe Manganiello was unraveling. What began as strange symptoms became a relentless assault on his body: skin, lungs, eyes, thyroid, digestion. Specialists offered guesses, not answers. He chased hope across continents and belief systems, from sterile hospital corridors to candlelit rituals, desperate for a name to pin to his suffering and a path back to himself.
The cost was brutal. His health, his marriage, his sense of certainty were all stripped away, culminating in a life-saving amputation that forced him to confront the possibility that survival might not mean returning to who he once was. In that darkness, he found an unexpected inheritance in old stories and family secrets, and a new identity forged through pain. Bloodlines is not just his memoir of illness—it’s the record of a man who refused to disappear.
