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Alcoholics Anonymous

Author of Alcoholics Anonymous

136 Works 8,128 Members 72 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: Photo by user Vangore / Wikimedia Commons.

Works by Alcoholics Anonymous

Alcoholics Anonymous (1939) 3,636 copies, 33 reviews
Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions (1953) 1,849 copies, 12 reviews
Living Sober (2002) 542 copies, 9 reviews
Came to Believe (1987) 293 copies, 1 review
Dr. Bob and the Good Oldtimers (1980) 201 copies, 4 reviews
The Little Red Book (1946) — Author — 174 copies, 2 reviews
Take It Off and Keep It Off (1977) 25 copies, 1 review
The Eye Opener (1987) 22 copies
The Little Red Book: The Original 1946 Edition (2013) — Author — 21 copies
The Little Red Book For Women (2004) — Author — 12 copies
A Little Time for Myself (2023) 8 copies
Index to the Big Book — Author — 5 copies
Alcoholics Anonymous Study Edition — Author — 2 copies
Big Book (ASL 5 vols) (1996) 2 copies
AA Today 25 1 copy
Alcololics Anonymous — Author — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Gender
n/a
Places of residence
New York, New York, USA
Associated Place (for map)
New York, USA

Members

Reviews

82 reviews
I'm reading this because many of my friends & my loved one live the Steps, and I want to understand better what is going on in his life.

The book is at times difficult to read, because of how it is written, which is more of a "stream of consciousness" style.

Some parts, I can not get into, but I find that if I just open the book to a random page and read, then there is some piece of knowledge/information there for me that I happen to need at the moment.

The "Big Book" has saved many lives...and show more I really believe that those of us who have loved ones living the steps could benefit from reading the book as well. show less
This is the "Big Book" of Alcoholics Anonymous--its basic text. At the core are the "12 Steps" and "Twelve Step" programs are legion--including Overeaters Anonymous--which I was a part of for a time. I'm not saying there isn't wisdom in the twelve-steps. But it's very much God-based. Even though I found a Atheist Group in my area, that aspect of the program was very hard for me to translate into secular terms. Making an inventory of your faults, making amends, promptly admitting when you're show more wrong--these are all good, healthy and healing things--for yourselves and others. But half the steps cite God--and too often the program as I experienced it had uncomfortably cult-like aspects and I drifted away from it. And goodness knows, the whole concept of "addiction" and "abstinence" are hard to translate when you're dealing with a substance--food--you can't really make a clean break from. And I think making food the enemy--as an addiction model does--is not in the end the way to go about gaining a healthy relationship with it--at least not for me long-term.

So my relatively low rating reflects my personal reaction and experience with a Twelve Step Program--even though I know millions have claimed this book and its principles saved their lives. And so pervasive are Twelve-Step groups, I'd argue that cultural literacy alone means you should be familiar with this book. And certainly many of the personal stories in this book are harrowing and riveting--and inspiring.
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The very title - The Big Book - sounds so cheesy, so all-American [especially since at the time it was written the book really wasn't all that big and by today's standards its positively minute. It's only one volume, for Heaven's sake] that I'd sooner put faith in one of those Eat all your favourite fattening foods in huge quantities and Lose Weight Hand over Fist type books.

So when I was told I needed the Big Book to stop drinking I reluctantly purchased a copy and hied off the a Big Book show more meeting. It was unlike anything I've ever been to before and the book is nothing short of a miracle.

The author, Bill Wilson, was a hopeless alcoholic and non-practising Christian when he recieved divine inspiration and, having joined the Oxford group, bought the still-suffering alcoholic Dr Bob Smith to sobriety. The two men together founded alcoholics Anontymous in 1935.

One of Dr Bob's best friend was a Catholic priest, Father Edward Dowling, and he flirted with the church for many years without actually converting because, he said, AA could not be seen to ally itself to any one faith. Both Bob and Bill were Christians however, and the Big Book is a true reflection of the essence of Christ's teachings.

Surprisingly though, Jews and other non-Christians also see the book as being spiritual and encapsulating the messages of love central to their beliefs, while even athiests can recognise the humanist principals of treating others decently and doing the next best thing, and have no problem - after initial reservations - embracing the Big Book whole-heartedly.

To say a piece of writing is divinely inspired reeks of either anachronism or charlatanry: however, for a work to have save so many lives and to be all things to all men who really need it, argues the interception of a higher power. A wonderful work for everyone, not just alcoholics - not just addicts, unless your addiction is to living a good life.
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½
A fascinating yet understated account of how something grows and takes hold. This particular account was of course written by the man who was pivotal to it all happening, which surely shapes it, but nonetheless one cannot help but be impressed. I read up to page 222, which is where other voices take over.
I am reminded of Dorothy Day and how she grew a movement. Her granddaughter's account feels quite different! I'm interested in reading this story from different angles as well.

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Statistics

Works
136
Members
8,128
Popularity
#2,977
Rating
4.2
Reviews
72
ISBNs
211
Languages
5
Favorited
1

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