For the majority of the past ten years, Joe Manganiello’s image has been subtly striking. Physically commanding, consistently endearing, and married to one of Hollywood’s most recognizable faces, he appeared to be a man in total control of his life. It turns out that the reality was quite different.
The 49-year-old Manganiello’s memoir, Bloodlines, is scheduled for release on October 13. The information that has surfaced in advance of the book’s release is the kind that completely changes the narrative. The True Blood and Magic Mike star secretly battled a series of autoimmune diseases that affected his skin, thyroid, eyes, lungs, and digestive system for about seven years. Chronic pain was present. An organ that could have saved lives was amputated. According to him, there were periods of medical uncertainty so severe that physicians were unable to provide definitive answers.
According to him, it was the most brutally challenging period of his life. People don’t use that phrase lightly, and as someone who made a living by projecting physical invincibility, it strikes a different chord.
The fact that this ordeal occurred nearly simultaneously with his marriage to Sofía Vergara adds a layer of complexity to the timeline. The couple got married in 2015, and their divorce was finalized in 2024. Therefore, the seven-year health crisis cast a shadow over almost the entire trajectory of that relationship; the publisher of the memoir notes this fact without providing further details, leaving readers to make the necessary connections until the book is released. How much of that personal suffering entered the marriage or influenced its outcome is still unknown. However, it is difficult to overlook the overlap.

Manganiello didn’t just wait it out when traditional medicine was unable to shed light. He started searching elsewhere, which led him to ancient myths, shamans, pagan rituals, and ultimately his own family history. He discovered his Armenian heritage and ancestors who survived the genocide through that excavation. These individuals were shaped by violence, displacement, and, intriguingly, recurring patterns of chronic illness. Reading the book’s early framing gives the impression that the health crisis evolved beyond a simple medical emergency. It turned into a self-evaluation.
A journey like that usually transforms a person. And it appears to have, at least based on the external cues. Manganiello has moved with a more subdued, steady energy since his divorce from Vergara was made public in 2023 than the rumors surrounding the split might have suggested. He started dating TV host and actress Caitlin O’Connor in 2023. Later that year, they appeared on the red carpet together, and in October 2025, they got engaged. Additionally, he has openly discussed leaving Los Angeles, a city that frequently retains residents long after they are no longer useful.
Here, it’s not important to focus on the celebrity mechanics of divorce and rebound. It’s possible that Manganiello underwent a truly transformative experience, either physically, spiritually, or ancestrally, and is just now discovering the words to describe it. Actors’ memoirs can go either way. Some are brand management exercises disguised as vulnerabilities. Bloodlines seems to have a bit more weight to it, at least according to the publisher’s framing: a true story of a person who almost lost everything invisible about himself while his visible life appeared to be in perfect condition.
In October, readers will find out if the book lives up to that promise. However, the Joe Manganiello that emerged from this time—engaged, moved, and open about years of hidden suffering—looks less like a man getting over a divorce and more like someone who had a much longer and stranger journey ahead of him than anyone outside of his social circle was aware of.
