For more information on AA and 12 step programs, please see the following, courtesy of Alcoholics Anonymous. For more detailed information please contact Alcoholics Anonymous directly.
Click here to return to the first part in the series, “Definining Alcoholics Anonymous.”
A.A. Literature, Page 2
Booklets
Came To Believe (120 pages)
Living Sober (87 pages)
A.A. In Prison: Inmate To Inmate (127 pages)
Pamphlets
44 Questions
A.A. Traditions — How It Developed
Members of the Clergy Ask About A.A.
The A.A. Group
A.A. Membership Survey
Three Talks To Medical Societies By Bill W.
A.A. As a Resource for the Medical Profession
Is A.A. For You?
Is A.A. For Me?
This is A.A.
Questions and Answers on Sponsorship
A.A. for the Woman
The Jack Alexander Article
Letter to a Woman Alcoholic
A.A. for the Native North American
A.A. and the Gay/Lesbian Alcoholic
Young People and A.A.
A.A. and the Armed Services
The A.A. Member—Medications and Other Drugs
Do You Think You’re Different?
Can A.A. Help Me Too?
Black/African Americans Share Their Stories
Is There an Alcoholic in Your Life?
Inside A.A.
G.S.R.
The Twelve Steps Illustrated
The Twelve Traditions Illustrated
The Twelve Concepts Illustrated
Let’s Be Friendly With Our Friends
A.A. for the Older Alcoholic — Never Too Late
A Newcomer Asks
How A.A. Members Cooperate
A.A. in Correctional Facilities
A Message to Correctional Facilities Administrators
A.A. in Treatment Facilities
Bridging The Gap
If You Are a Professional
A Member’s Eye
View of Alcoholics Anonymous
Problems Other Than Alcohol
Understanding Anonymity
The CoFounders of Alcoholics Anonymous
Speaking At Non A.A. Meetings
A Brief Guide to A.A.
What Happened to Joe – a full color comicbook-style pamphlet
It Happened to Alice – a full color comicbook-style pamphlet
Too Young? – a cartoon pamphlet for teenagers
It Sure Beats Sitting in a Cell
Memo to an Inmate
A.A. in Your Community
Is There an Alcoholic in the Workplace?
Flyers and Fact Sheets
A.A. At a Glance
Where Do I Go From Here?
Carrying the Message Into Correctional Facilities
A Message to Teenagers
Information on Alcoholics Anonymous
Single copies of Conference approved pamphlets and flyers are available without charge to anyone with a professional interest in the A.A. program.
Films
Alcoholics Anonymous — An Inside View
It Sure Beats Sitting in a Cell
Young People and A.A.
Hope: Alcoholics Anonymous
A.A.—Rap With Us
Carrying the Message Behind These Walls
Your A.A. General Service Office, The Grapevine,and the General Service Structure
Tape Cassettes
Alcoholics Anonymous (first 11 chapters)
Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions
A.A. Comes of Age
A.A. LITERATURE
For Special Needs
A.A.W.S. produces a wide range of literature and material for alcoholics with special needs. For the blind and visually impaired there is recovery literature in Braille, as well as audio cassettes. Alcoholics Anonymous and Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions are available in American Sign Language on VHS videos for the deaf and hard of hearing, as well as closed-caption films and videos.
For a complete list please request our catalog A.A. Literature and Audiovisual Material for Special Needs (F10SN)
Click here to return to the first part in the series, “Introduction to the A.A. Recovery Program”.
The above information is from “A.A. Fact File”, prepared by General Service Office of Alcoholics Anonymous. This information is also available on G.S.O.’s A.A. Website: www.aa.org.
If you have any questions about Alcoholics Anonymous or alcohol treatment, please call us 24-hours at (888) 426-6086 or if you’d like us to contact you, send us a confidential e-mail by filling out our online form.