SOCIAL
PROGRESS
March 1941
March 1941
ALCOHOLICS
ANONYMOUS: Works Publishing Company, New York, $3.50
Here
is an unusual book. It is the dramatic recital of the experience of
more than a hundred men and women in their fight against alcoholism,
their victory, and their desire and determination to pass on to
others the secret of their release. The group who has contributed to
this book began with two or three alcoholics whose similar
experiences drew them together. "To show other alcoholics
precisely how we have recovered from a seemingly hopeless state of
mind and body," says the introduction, "is the main purpose
of this book."
Let it
be said at the outset that there is nothing sensational in these
stories, although they are filled with the drama of conflict, failure
and final release. These writers believe that there is but one cure
for the alcoholic. That is the realization of his own inability to
cope with his repeated failures and the recognition of the reality of
that Power greater than himself, whom we call God, to drive out his
obsession. The head of one of the nation's great hospitals for the
treatment of alcoholism and drug addiction contributes a statement to
the introductory pages declaring that here is the working out of the
principles of a sound "moral psychology."
The
discussion of these principles is free of emotionalism. It is neither
sectarian nor partisan, for men and women of all religions and of
none, have contributed to the book "In our personal stories,"
says one writer, "you will find wide variation in the way in
which each teller approaches and conceives of the Power greater than
himself. One proposition, however, these men and women are strikingly
agreed. Every one of them has gained access to, and believes in, a
power greater than himself. This power has in each case accomplished
the miraculous, the humanly impossible."
The
movement has grown and spread without formal organization and groups
are widely scattered over the country. Its members, mostly business
and professional folk, go about their usual work, their avocation
being to help others through their friendship and moral concern to
find release.
For
ministers, social workers, psychiatrists, and all others who are
concerned with the rescue of those sick in mind and body, from the
possession of the liquor habit, this book is a source of suggestion
and inspiration.
E.G.R.
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