25,20$
Sober & Out is a collection of stories by AA members who are lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgendered (and a few friends) from the pages of AA Grapevine. The stories in this book show that—like most alcoholics—LGBT AAs struggle to fit in, stay sober and find peace in their lives.
This item is also available as an ebook on Apple Books, at Barnes & Noble and on Amazon, and on Kobo.
GV-33 – Taxes included.
Grapevine articles illuminating the varied experiences of belonging to an AA group today. The stories compiled in the third edition of The Home Group: Heartbeat of AA were published in the Grapevine magazine from 1980 to 1990. This book contains 42 articles written by AA members that offer a moving portrait of AA home groups.
This item is also available as an ebook on Apple Books, at Barnes & Noble and on Amazon, and on Kobo.
GV-15 – Taxes included.

Two titles in a single booklet. The A.A. Service Manual is a critical resource for A.A. members involved in service. Chapters cover the roles of GSRs, DCMs, delegates, directors and trustees, as well as what happens at G.S.O. and Grapevine. Substantive appendices cover the principle of rotation, the Third Legacy Procedure and much more. In Twelve Concepts for World Service, A.A. co-founder Bill W. articulates the principles by which A.A.’s world service operates and recounts how these emerged through A.A.’s early history and experience.
Fully reformatted in 2021, revised in 2024.
BM-31 – Taxes included.

A collection of readings that moves through the calendar year one day at a time: A.A. members reflect on favorite quotations from the literature of Alcoholics Anonymous. The volume focuses on all Three Legacies of Recovery, Unity and Service.
A page for each day of the year.
This item is also available as an ebook on Google Play, on Apple Books, at Barnes & Noble and on Amazon, and on Kobo. You may also read it free of charge on aa.org.
B-12 – Taxes included.

Full of first-person accounts and primary source material, this portrait of Bill W. recounts his journey from Vermont youth to Wall Street success story to hopeless drunk — until a series of remarkable events allowed him to stop drinking and to co-found Alcoholics Anonymous.
We follow Bill through his tireless work for the Fellowship: the publishing of the Big Book, the development of the Twelve Traditions, the formation of the General Service Conference. Closing chapters walk us through Bill’s final years of challenge and change. With 39 archival photographs.
B-9 – Taxes included.

Known as the “Big Book,” the basic text of Alcoholics Anonymous has helped millions of people recover from alcoholism since the first edition appeared in 1939. Chapters describing the A.A. recovery program — the original Twelve Steps — and the personal histories of A.A.’s co-founders remain unchanged since the original, while new stories have been added to the personal histories with each edition.
Fourth Edition (2001).
B-30 – Taxes included.

