All taxes are included in the displayed price.
| Weight | 60 g |
|---|---|
| Dimensions | 100 × ,3 × 220 mm |
| Author | |
| Format | |
| Year of publication | |
| Pages | 48 |
| Language |
Thirteen LGBTQ alcoholics chronicle their experience before and after joining Alcoholics Anonymous, and how — despite their trepidations about A.A. — they discover that the tie that binds us all together is freedom from alcohol. Includes stories by recovering alcoholics who self-identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans and transitioning, and queer.
P-32 – Taxes included.

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.

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.

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.

Directed to family and friends of the problem drinker, this pamphlet describes what active alcoholism looks like and explains how A.A. may be able to help a loved one stop drinking.
P-30 – Taxes included.

