| Weight | 18 g |
|---|---|
| Dimensions | 100 × 2 × 120 mm |
| Author | |
| Format | |
| Year of publication | |
| Pages | 28 |
| Language |
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.

An easy-to-read version of A.A.’s program of recovery: each of the Twelve Steps is explained through illustration and simplified text.
P-55 – Taxes included.

Report from a group of doctors in Alcoholics Anonymous. A.A. members share their experience with medications and other drugs. This pamphlet offers some suggestions to A.A. members who are prescribed medication by their doctors, in order to minimize the risk of relapse.
P-11 – Taxes included.

Speaks to newcomers who may wonder how A.A. can work for someone “different” – black or Jewish, teenager or nearing 80, plus nine other people who tell how the A.A. program has worked for them.
A nice pamphlet sharing stories of A.A. members who recovered from alcohol even though they don’t fit the stereotypical definition of an alcoholic. A.A. is for you, too!
P-13 – Taxes included.

Nineteen young A.A.s — aged 16 to 27 — tell how they were able to stop drinking through Alcoholics Anonymous, dispelling many common “myths” about alcoholism and A.A. Includes a self-diagnostic questionnaire for those who think they may have a drinking problem.
P-4 – Taxes included.

