THIRD
EDITION OF BIG BOOK IS NOW IN PRINT
THE A.A. GRAPEVINE
August 1976
THE A.A. GRAPEVINE
August 1976
The
third edition of Alcoholics Anonymous providentially came off the
press just as the last printing of the second edition had been
exhausted. The new big book had been years in preparation, going
through the same careful process that keeps all A.A. literature as
close as possible to an expression of the Fellowship s group
conscience
That
phrase "new Big Book" may sound startling. We have all
heard A.A. talks that recall a newcomer's alcoholic arrogance with
the words "At first I wanted to rewrite the Big Book." Upon
opening a copy of the third edition, the warp reader will be relieved
to find that the Big Book has not been rewritten. The basic text (pp.
1-164) is unaltered, so is the section of personal stories headed
"Pioneers of A.A." In the section headed "They Stopped
in Time" and "They Lost Nearly All," 17 stories have
been retained from the second edition, and 13 new stories have been
added, to reflect present-day membership more accurately. In 1939,
when the book Alcoholics Anonymous was first published, it gave its
name to a hitherto "nameless bunch of alcoholics," then
numbering about only 100. More than 300,000 copies of that edition
were eventually printed, playing a powerful role in A.A.'s growth to
a membership of about 130,000 by 1955, when the second edition was
produced. Successive printings brought the combined distribution of
these two editions to a total of 1,450,000 by the spring of this
year, when the third appeared.
Its
cover is a lighter shade of blue; the title is printed in a more
modern type face that emphasizes the initials "A.A." -
meaningless before 1939, but now meaning life itself to over
1,000,000 alcoholics.
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