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Title | Description |
| P-1 |
This is AA
(Braille Edition available.) | Introductory pamphlet describing the kind of people AAs are and what AAs have learned about alcoholism. |
| P-2 |
44 Questions
(Braille Edition available.) | Answers the questions most frequently asked about AA by alcoholics seeking help, as well as by their families and friends. The complete text of this pamphlet may be found on AA's General Service Office Website. |
| P-3 |
Is AA For You?
(Braille Edition available.) | Symptoms of alcoholism are summed up in twelve questions most AAs had to answer to identify themselves as alcoholics. The complete text of this pamphlet may be found on AA's General Service Office Website. |
| P-4 | Young People and AA | Ten young AAs - 16 to 27 - tell how the program works for them. |
| P-5 | AA for the Woman | Relates the experiences ofalcoholic women - all ages and from all walks of life. |
| P-6 | Three Talks to Medical Societies by Bill W, Co-Founder of AA | Contains Bill's ideas of how AA works, principles borrowed from medicine and religion, and a summary of AA's first 23 years. |
| P-8 | The Twelve Concepts Illustrated | Brief, easy-to-read text and clever illustrations make the Twelve Concepts for World Service clear and understandable. |
| P-9 | Memo to an Inmate Who May Be an Alcoholic | A message from AAs who themselves have been inmates. |
| P-10 | How It Works | An excerpt in large type from Chapter 5 of the Big Book. This page, which includes the Twelve Steps, is often read at the beginning of meetings. |
| P-11 | The AA Member - Medications and Drugs | Report from a Group of doctors in Alcoholics Anonymous sharing their experience with medications and other drugs. |
| P-12 | The Jack Alexander Article About AA | Published in 1941 in The Saturday Evening Post, this article sparked the first great surge of interest in AA. A highlight in AA history. |
| P-13 | Do You Think You're Different? | Especially for newcomers who may wonder how AA can work for someone "different" - black or Jewish, teenager or nearing 80, plus none other people who tell how the AA program has worked for them. The complete text of this pamphlet may be found on AA's General Service Office Website. |
| P-15 | Questions and Answers on Sponsorship | Uses shared AA experience to answer 34 questions likely to be asked by persons seeking sponsors, persons wanting to be sponsors, and groups planning sponsorship activity. |
| P-16 | The AA Group | Informal guide tells how a group works most effectively, how a new group can be started, how each group can be linked to AA as a whole. |
| P-17 | AA Tradition - How It Developed | Bill W's 1946-47 Grapevine Articles on the Traditions trace the evolution of principles for AA unity and growth. |
| P-18 | Inside AA | Explains the AA service structure in the US and Canada, describing all elements linking members and groups with the General Service Conference. |
| P-19 | GSR May Be the Most Important Job in AA | Outlines responsibilities and useful sources of information for GSRs. What a group should keep in mind when electing a GSR. |
| P-21 | AA for the Native North American | Addressed to and contains stories by Native American AA members. |
| P-22 | Time to Start Living - Large Print Edition | See P-7 above. |
| P-23 | AA as a Resource for the Health Care Professional | Gives information about the Fellowship and describes some approaches that health care professionals use in referring problem drinkers to AA. |
| P-24 | A Newcomer Asks | Gives straightforward, brief answers on 15 points that once puzzled us. The complete text of this pamphlet may be found on AA's General Service Office Website. |
| P-25 | Members of the Clergy Ask About Alcoholics Anonymous | Introduction to AA for members of the clergy unfamiliar with the Fellowship. |
| P-26 | AA in Correctional Facilities | Experience based on the functioning of AA groups in prisons, with institutional opinions recommending AA as a helpful ally. |
| P-27 | AA in Treatment Facilities | Shares experience of treatment facility administrators and of AAs who have carried the message into these facilities. |
| P-29 | How AA Members Cooperate With Professionals | Answers specific queries about working within AA Traditions. |
| P-30 | Is There an Alcoholic in Your Life? | Explains the AA program as it affects anyone close to an alcoholic - spouse, family member, friend. The complete text of this pamphlet may be found on AA's General Service Office Website. |
| P-31 | AA in Your Community | Six-page folder explains how AA is geared to work in any community to help alcoholics. Prepared especially to help groups, central offices and PI committees interpret AA to the community. |
| P-32 | AA and the Gay/Lesbian Alcoholic | Excerpts from the experience, strength and hope of sober gay and lesbian alcoholics point out that the tie that binds us all together is freedom from alcohol. |
| P-33 | It Sure Beats Sitting in a Cell | An illustrated pamphlet which presents the experience of seven inmates who found AA while in prison. It also offers suggested dos and dont's for staying sober after release. |
| P-34 | Let's Be Friendly With our Friends | In this Grapevine reprint, Bill explains the importance of cooperating with doctors, social workers, etc. |
| P-35 | Problems Other Than Alcohol | Bill's thoughts on the status of drug addicts within AA are as timely as when they appeared in a 1958 Grapevine issue. |
| P-36 | Is AA for Me? | Based on the 12 Questions in "Is AA for You?", this 32-page pamphlet is an illustrated, easy-to-read version. |
| P-37 | Too Young? | With a full-color cover, this cartoon pamphlet speaks to teenagers in their own language, telling the varied drinking stories of six young people (13 to 18) and showing their welcome to AA. |
| P-38 | What Happened to Joe | Dramatic story of a young construction worker and his drinking problem, told in brightly colored "comic book" style. |
| P-39 | It Happened to Alice | Easy-to-read "comic book" style pamphlet for women alcoholics. |
| P-40 | Speaking at Non-AA Meetings | For AAs asked to speak to organizations outside the Fellowship about AA, alcoholism and the alcoholc, it suggests what to say and how to say it. |
| P-41 | A Member's-Eye View of Alcoholics Anonymous | Explains the AA program to social workers, counselors, physicians, and others in the alcoholism field. It also provides fresh insight into AA for all members. |
| P-42 | A Brief Guide to Alcoholics Anonymous | Originally designed for use in schools, this folder also lends itself to other PI purposes. In simple language, it describes our program and offers general information on AA. |
| P-43 | The Twelve Traditions Illustrated | Based on a Grapevine Series; presents both the spirit and the practical application of our Traditions. |
| P-44 | AA's Legacy of Service | In this foreword to "The AA Service Manual," Bill describes the beginnings of group and general services, the origin of the Traditions, and the birth of the Conference. |
| P-45 | Circles of Love and Service | This leaflet outlines our service structure in full-color diagrams. |
| P-46 | If You Are a Professional, AA Wants to Work With You. | Directed at professionals of all types who deal with alcoholics; explains how AAs and non-AAs can work together. |
| P-47 | Understanding Anonymity | Explains clearly what anonymity means both within and outside AA. |
| P-48 | AA Membership Survey | Summarizes the latest survey of membership in the US and Canada: who AAs are (age, gender, occupation), and how they got to AA. |
| P-49 | Bridging the Gap - Between Treatment and AA Through Temporary Contact Programs | An 8-page pamphlet for AAs who carry the message into treatment facilities. |
| P-50 | AA and the Armed Services | Personal stories tell how men or women in the military - any rank, any age - can beat a drinking problem through AA. |
| P-51 | Can AA Help Me Too? | Black/African Americans share their stories. |
| P-52 | The AA Grapevine - Our Meeting in Print | Provides basic information on the Grapevine magazine. |
| P-53 | The Co-Founders of Alcoholics Anonymous | Brief biographical sketches of Bill W and Dr Bob, together with their last major talks. |
| P-54 | Is there an Alcoholic in the Workplace? | Of interest to management and union officials, this leaflet gives a concise description of the help AA can offer to the alcoholic employee. |
| P-55 | Twelve Steps Illustrated | An easy-to-read version of AA's Twelve Steps. Step appears at the top of each page with simplified text under an illustration. |
| M-63 | This is AA | Braille edition of pamphlet P-1. |
| M-64 | Is AA For You? | Braille edition of pamphlet P-3. |
| M-65 | 44 Questions | Braille edition of pamphlet P-2. |
| F-1 | AA at a Glance | Flyer containing condensed version of facts about the Fellowship. |
| F-2 | Information on Alcoholics Anonymous | Fact sheet for PI/CPC use. |
| F-3 | Self-Support: Where Money and Spirituality Mix | A full-color illustrated pamphlet that suggests ways of apportioning group contributions to support various service entities. |
| F-5 | Carrying the Message into Correctional Facilities | Basic Information for AAs who speak in correctional facilities. |
| F-8 | Problems Other Than Alcohol | Excerpts from pamphlet P-35 especially prepared for PI/CPC work. |
| F-9 | A Message to Teenagers | Flyer adapted from the pamphlet "Too Young?"; for PI in schools. |