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| Weight | 19 g |
|---|---|
| Dimensions | 100 × 2 × 120 mm |
| Author | |
| Format | |
| Year of publication | |
| Pages | 28 |
| Language |
Twelve alcoholic women from a range of backgrounds — a U.S. Marine, a stay-at-home mom, a teenage runaway — share how they stopped drinking and found recovery in A.A. Touching on many of the themes common among still-suffering female alcoholics, their stories show how Alcoholics Anonymous helped these women find a new way of life.
P-5 – Taxes included.

This pamphlet includes the experience of A.A. members who are hearing and visually impaired, housebound, chronically ill or disabled due to brain damage or stroke. Their stories tell how they found A.A. and are living new and productive lives free from alcohol.
P-83 – Taxes included.

Nine new stories and a new introduction are featured in this revised pamphlet now titled “Indigenous People in A.A.” (Six further stories remain from the previous version of this pamphlet, “A.A. For the Native North American.”) The new stories are all written by Indigenous people, each from a different tribal nation or community, who have been able to stop drinking in A.A.
(Note — The use of the term “Indigenous” in this pamphlet is intended to be inclusive of those cultures living on the land prior to colonization.)
P-21 – Taxes included.

Uses shared A.A. experience to answer 34 questions likely to be asked by persons seeking sponsors, persons wanting to be sponsors, and groups planning sponsorship activity.
P-15 – Taxes included.


A message of hope from formerly incarcerated members of Alcoholics Anonymous, this pamphlet contains personal stories explaining how A.A. can help alcoholics stop drinking even in prison. Includes a self-diagnostic questionnaire for this who think they may have a drinking problem.
P-9 – Taxes included.

