| Weight | 37 g |
|---|---|
| Dimensions | 100 × 2 × 230 mm |
| Author | |
| Format | |
| Year of publication | |
| Pages | 40 |
| Language |
Informal guide tells how a group works most effectively, how a new group can be started and how each group can be linked to A.A. as a whole.
Touches upon the following topics, and more:
P-16 – Taxes included.

Excerpts from the pamphlet Problems Other than Alcohol [P-35].
Bill W.’s thoughts on the status of those addicted to drugs and other substances within A.A. are as timely as when they appeared in a 1958 Grapevine.
We encourage nonalcoholic addicts to attend “Anonymous Movements” related to their specific addictions. You are also welcome to attend “open” Alcoholics Anonymous meetings.
F-8 – Free.

This pamphlet explains how anonymity serves as both a safeguard at the personal level and a spiritual principle at the public level, and outlines what this means for A.A. members both within A.A. and outside of it. Includes FAQs on social media and the Internet, as well as suggestions for dealing with friends and family.
P-47 – Taxes included.

Brief, easy-to-read text and clever illustrations make the Twelve Concepts for World Service clear and understandable.
P-8 – Taxes included.

Two titles in a single booklet. The A.A. Service Manual is a critical resource for A.A. members involved in service. Chapters cover the roles of GSRs, DCMs, delegates, directors and trustees, as well as what happens at G.S.O. and Grapevine. Substantive appendices cover the principle of rotation, the Third Legacy Procedure and much more. In Twelve Concepts for World Service, A.A. co-founder Bill W. articulates the principles by which A.A.’s world service operates and recounts how these emerged through A.A.’s early history and experience.
Fully reformatted in 2021, revised in 2024.
BM-31 – Taxes included.

