AA Bibliography Home

Rare and hard to find AA Spirituality Books,
Oxford Group Books and Temperance Books
List by LD P Feb 2009

Available Summer 2009
AA Collectable Spirituality Books Price Guide
(and other collectable books relating to AA)
by LD P
editor of AA Bibliography Web site

$25 reserve your copy today

150 pages up to date information

A New Pair of Glasses by Chuck C 1985 $35
A Sober Faith G Aiken Taylor
AA Way of Life 1st edition $70 to $110 AA World Sevices 1967
AA Comes of Age AA World Services 1st Edition $35
AA Comes of Age AA World Services 1st Edition Harper Edition $700

Agony of Alcoholism Judge Bill C $35 - $50
An Interpertation of the Twelve Steps of the Alcoholics Anonymous Program
printed 1947 reprinted 1952 as little Red Book

More will be continued in new release
Available Spring 2003
AA Collectable Book Price Guide by LD P editor of AA Bibliography Web site

Bill Wilson's Alcoholics Anonymous
Big Book

Question: What is the single most sought after and collected title in the history of book collecting? Answer: Bill Wilson's ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS.

Throughout history one of the most frustratingly incurable of mankind's many horrors has been the problem of alcoholism and addiction. In 1935, on Mother's Day, in Akron Ohio, what could be argued as one of the greatest positive events of the 20th century took place. Two hopeless drunks discovered a solution -- not a scientific cure for alcoholism, but a way NOT to drink -- one day at a time.

Not unlike the goings on almost two thousand years earlier among another group of people in trouble and in search, the very small group quickly became a community. From the dregs to the cream of society ...sitting together, laughing together, crying together, talking about strange things, people with a certain quality, a fellowship so oddly compelling that strangers dropping by out of curiosity would stay, saying I don't understand this yet BUT I WANT IN. Soon a small group of 2 or 3 became many groups, then a large community. Then they decided to write it all down.

That's where we, as seekers and finders of out-of-print and collectible books come in. The sixteen printings of the 1st edition of ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS, the original work and contributions of these first 100 or so men and women led by Bill Wilson and Dr. Bob Smith, is out of print. It has been replaced by the current 3rd edition, revised and updated to more accurately and relevantly reflect the demographics of the current membership.

Book lovers with a personal interest in the fellowship, or those who just appreciate and understand its social, historical and medical importance, seek the big book 1st editions. In them they find a tangible link to the early formative years of the program, the history and lore of which has reached mythic proportions in some circles.

Forgetting the demand side of the supply and demand equation, the first 7 printings of ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS are genuinely scarce. The 2nd through 7th each had a print run of only 5000 copies (the coveted 1st printing, the red book, having only 4,730). For those whose aspirations and/or budgets do not extend to those heights, the 8th through the 16th printings, whose print runs varied from about 15,000 to 50,000 copies, are much more affordable, starting around $400.

Almost every printing has a story or something about it that sets it apart from its fellows... The green book...the unaccountably rare (everyone's got a theory) 7th printing... the little 8th, published under the paper rationing strictures of WWII... and on and on.

In addition to the first editions, there are many avenues for one seriously interested in collecting AA material to pursue. The once lightly regarded 2nd editions with their unique reversible dust jackets have been seriously collected for the past several years now. Bill Wilson's involvement with a spiritual revival movement known as the Oxford Group Movement formed the basis of the program that evolved into ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS. Its history and literature are inextricably entwined with AA and are of a great deal of interest to those most interested in the spiritual foundation of AA. Fiction such as Charles Jackson's LOST WEEKEND, Upton Sinclair's CUP OF FURY, and biographies such as Lillian Roth's I'LL CRY TOMORROW are also possible ways to go.

The history of AA has left a paper trail, almost from its birth over 60 years ago. It is my belief that those interested in following it and owning bits and pieces of it will continue to grow just as its membership has over the years.