An Interpretation Of The Twelve Steps of the Alcoholics Anonymous Program - 1948 Printing

An Interpretation Of The Twelve Steps of the Alcoholics Anonymous Program - 1948 Printing

$145.00
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An Interpretation Of The Twelve Steps of the Alcoholics Anonymous Program by Ed Webster. This book was published by Coll-Webb Company. This printing is from 1948. This is the last printing of this book before featuring the title “The Little Red Book”. The book was nicknamed “The Little Red Book,” and eventually adopted that name in 1949. The author was Ed Webster, who got sober in Minneapolis, Minnesota, in 1941. He and Barry Collins formed their own publishing company, called Coll-Webb Co. which distributed this book and others to members of AA until Ed's death in 1971. Here you can read the Authors Note: The material in this little red book is an outgrowth of a series of notes originally prepared for "12 Steps" instruction to A. A. beginners and as a source of ideas for A.A. discussion meetings. Its distribution is founded on a desire to "Carry the Message" in recognition of our return to sane living after alcoholism had made life all but impossible. Many groups, in meeting the A.A.

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