All taxes are included in the displayed price.
| Weight | 4 g |
|---|---|
| Dimensions | 100 × ,2 × 230 mm |
| Author | |
| Format | |
| Year of publication | |
| Pages | 4 |
| Language |
For correctional professionals including probation officers, prison administrators, and those in the judicial system who deal with alcoholics, this pamphlet offers information about what A.A. is and can do and how groups function in a correctional facility.
P-20 – Taxes included.

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.

With sharing that reflects the boundless range of belief (and non-belief) among A.A. members — including Buddhism, Islam, Native American faith traditions, and atheism and agnosticism — this pamphlet shows how Alcoholics Anonymous is a spiritual organization, rather than a religious one.
P-84 – Taxes included.

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.
P-35 – Taxes included.

Known as the “Big Book,” the basic text of Alcoholics Anonymous has helped millions of people recover from alcoholism since the first edition appeared in 1939. Chapters describing the A.A. recovery program — the original Twelve Steps — and the personal histories of A.A.’s co-founders remain unchanged since the original, while new stories have been added to the personal histories with each edition.
Fourth Edition (2001).
B-30 – Taxes included.

