White Lines

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A01=Ryan Caldwell
addiction recovery
alternative healing
Amazon jungle
Author_Ryan Caldwell
ayahuasca
Bath
Belfast
Category=DNC
Category=DNXC
Category=QRRV
Category=SFBT
concussion
elite sport
emotional honesty
England
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_sports-fitness
Exeter
forthcoming
identity crisis
inspirational nonfiction
Ireland international
Irish rugby
masculinity
memoir of reinvention
mental health
overcoming adversity
personal transformation
Peter Lockhart
post-sport life
prison survival
psychedelics
redemption
resilience
rugby memoir
Ryan Caldwell
second chance
shamanic healing
sports and mental health
sports biography
trauma
Ulster rugby
wellness journey

Product details

  • ISBN 9781399758567
  • Dimensions: 153 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 10 Sep 2026
  • Publisher: Hachette Books Ireland
  • Publication City/Country: IE
  • Product Form: Paperback
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From the roar of packed stadiums to the silence of a prison cell, White Lines is the blazing true story of Ryan Caldwell - former Ulster, Ireland and Premiership rugby player - whose fall from grace nearly cost him everything.

Once hailed as a towering enforcer on the pitch, Ryan's life spiralled after injury ended his career. Addiction, rage and despair took hold, culminating in a moment of devastating reckoning. But from the brink of death, he chose to fight - not for glory, but for survival.

What follows is a raw, unforgettable journey: through the depths of trauma, into the heart of the Amazon jungle, and across the rugged terrain of healing. With the help of shamanic wisdom, plant medicine and radical self-reflection, Ryan confronts the pain he buried beneath his rugby persona and begins to rebuild.

Co-written with journalist Peter Lockhart, White Lines is more than a sports memoir - it's a lit tale of redemption, resilience and the courage to rewrite your story. Gritty, honest, fiercely human, this is a book for anyone who's ever stood at the edge and wondered if there was a way back.

Ryan Caldwell is a former professional rugby player turned natural medicine and breathwork practitioner. Born in Belfast, he played rugby for Ulster, Bath, Exeter and Ireland, earning a reputation as a fierce competitor and free spirit before injury and self-destruction brought everything crashing down.
His story charts a turbulent journey from the heights of international sport to the depths of addiction, prison and recovery. Since rebuilding his life, Ryan has devoted himself to exploring what lies beneath performance and wellbeing: identity, trauma, healing, and what it really means to start again.
He shares his experiences with raw honesty and dark humour, the kind that comes from someone who has been through some incredibly dark times and emerged wiser. Today, Ryan speaks openly about mental health, addiction and transformation, helping others find their way back to themselves.
He lives quietly in Straid, Northern Ireland, with his partner Tara and their two young children, trading the roar of stadiums for the chaos of family life.

Peter Lockhart is a Belfast-based writer, journalist and solicitor whose work drifts between sport, memoir and the messier corners of being human. He writes regularly for The Irish News, Belfast Telegraph and BBC Sport, mostly about rugby, though he's been known to stray into stranger territory when there's a good story to tell.
Alongside his work in human rights law, Peter collaborates on books and long-form projects with a curiosity for what drives people, and what breaks them, both on and off the field. A lifelong Ulster and Ireland rugby fan, he also hosts The Red Hand podcast, dedicated to the joys and heartbreaks of following Ulster rugby, often in equal measure.
Peter's love of storytelling began aged eight with Peter Schmeichel's autobiography. These days he listens to audiobooks while pretending to do housework. He lives in East Belfast with his wife Emma, the first reader of every draft whether she likes it or not, and their two-year-old son, who remains unimpressed by his dad's podcasting career.

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