Alcoholism -- CongressesSee also what's at your library, or elsewhere.
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Filed under: Alcoholism -- Congresses- VIIe Congrès International Contre l'Abus des Boissons Alcooliques, Session de Paris, 1899 (2 volumes in French; 1900), by International Congress Against Alcoholism, ed. by docteur Legrain and Gaston Boissier
Filed under: Alcoholism -- Treatment -- Congresses
Items below (if any) are from related and broader terms.
Filed under: Alcoholism- Understanding and Counseling the Alcoholic (enlarged edition, 1990), by Howard Clinebell (HTML at religion-online.org)
- Controversies in the Addiction Field (1990), ed. by Ruth C. Engs (HTML at Indiana)
- Drunkenness a Vice, Not a Disease: A Paper (Hartford, CT: Case, Lockwood and Brainard Co., 1882), by John E. Todd (page images at HathiTrust)
- An Inquiry Into the Effects of Ardent Spirits Upon the Human Body and Mind; With an Account of the Means of Preventing, and of the Remedies for Curing Them (eighth edition, with additions; Exeter: Printed for J. Richardson, 1819), by Benjamin Rush
- International Socialist Congress of Vienna (August 23-29, 1914), Documents, 4th Commission: Alcoholism, by Emile Vandervelde (PDF at fes.de)
- International Socialist Congress of Vienna (August 23-29, 1914), Documents, 4th Commission: Alcoholism, by Emanuel Wurm (PDF at fes.de)
- The Liquor Problem: A Summary of Investigations Conducted by the Committee of Fifty, 1893-1903 (Boston and New York: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1905), by John S. Billings, Charles William Eliot, Henry W. Farnam, Jacob Lyman Greene, and Francis Greenwood Peabody, contrib. by Raymond Calkins
Filed under: Alcoholism -- Economic aspects -- United StatesFiled under: Alcoholism -- Fiction
Filed under: Alcoholics -- Fiction- The Lost Weekend (c1944), by Charles Jackson (HTML in Canada; NO US ACCESS)
- The Senator's Son: or, The Maine Law, a Last Refuge (second edition; Cleveland: Tooker and Gatchel, 1853), by Metta Victoria Fuller Victor
- The Senator's Son: or, The Maine Law, a Last Refuge (third edition; Cleveland: Tooker and Gatchel, 1853), by Metta Victoria Fuller Victor (multiple formats at archive.org)
- The Beautiful and Damned, by F. Scott Fitzgerald (Gutenberg text)
- The Beautiful and Damned (New York: C. Scribner's Sons, 1922), by F. Scott Fitzgerald
Filed under: Children of alcoholics -- Fiction- Boy: A Sketch, by Marie Corelli (multiple formats at archive.org)
Filed under: Women alcoholics -- Fiction- The Arc and the Sediment (Logan, UT: Utah State University Press, c2007), by Christine Diane Allen-Yazzie
Filed under: Alcoholics -- England -- FictionFiled under: Alcoholism -- Great BritainFiled under: Alcoholism -- IcelandFiled under: Alcoholism -- IndiaFiled under: Alcoholism -- Periodicals
Filed under: Alcoholism -- United States -- Periodicals- ADAMHA News, by United States Alcohol, Drug Abuse, and Mental Health Administration (partial serial archives)
Filed under: Alcoholism -- Research -- United States -- PeriodicalsFiled under: Alcoholism -- Treatment -- United States -- Periodicals
Filed under: Alcoholism -- Prevention -- ResearchFiled under: Alcoholism -- Religious aspects
Filed under: Alcoholism -- Treatment -- ResearchFiled under: Alcoholism -- Treatment- Resisting 12-Step Coercion: How to Fight Forced Participation in AA, NA, or 12-Step Treatment (Tucson, AZ: See Sharp Press, 2000), by Stanton Peele (HTML at Wayback Machine)
- Alcoholics Anonymous ("Big book online"; official online version of the 4th edition of 2001), contrib. by Bill W. (HTML and PDF files at aa.org)
- Alcoholics Anonymous: The Story of How Many Thousands of Men and Women Have Recovered From Alcoholism (new and revised edition; New York: Alcoholics Anonymous Publishing, 1955), contrib. by Bill W. (page images at HathiTrust)
- Alcoholics Anonymous: The Story of How Many Thousands of Men and Women Have Recovered From Alcoholism (New York: Works Pub. Co., 1947), by Bill W. (page images at HathiTrust; US access only)
- Alcoholics Anonymous: The Story of How More Than Fourteen Thousand Men and Women Have Recovered From Alcoholism (New York: Works Publishing, 1945), by Bill W. (page images at HathiTrust; US access only)
Filed under: Alcoholism -- United StatesFiled under: Alcohol -- Physiological effect- Alcohol, A Dangerous and Unnecessary Medicine: How and Why; What Medical Writers Say (Marcellus, NY: National Woman's Christian Temperance Union, 1900), by Martha Meir Allen (Gutenberg text)
- An Inquiry Into the Effects of Ardent Spirits Upon the Human Body and Mind; With an Account of the Means of Preventing, and of the Remedies for Curing Them (eighth edition, with additions; Exeter: Printed for J. Richardson, 1819), by Benjamin Rush
- Hygienic Physiology, With Special Reference to the Use of Alcoholic Drinks and Narcotics: Being a Revised Edition of the Fourteen Weeks in Human Physiology (edited for the use of schools; 1889), by Joel Dorman Steele (Gutenberg text)
- A Memoir of the Very Rev. Theobald Mathew; With an Account of the Rise and Progress of Temperance in Ireland (with Morris's "The Evil Effects of Drunkenness Physiologically Explained"; New York: A. V. Blake, 1841), by James Birmingham, ed. by P. H. Morris (page images at HathiTrust)
Filed under: Alcoholics -- Rehabilitation- Alcoholics Anonymous ("Big book online"; official online version of the 4th edition of 2001), contrib. by Bill W. (HTML and PDF files at aa.org)
- Understanding and Counseling the Alcoholic (enlarged edition, 1990), by Howard Clinebell (HTML at religion-online.org)
- Alcoholics Anonymous: The Story of How Many Thousands of Men and Women Have Recovered From Alcoholism (new and revised edition; New York: Alcoholics Anonymous Publishing, 1955), contrib. by Bill W. (page images at HathiTrust)
- Resisting 12-Step Coercion: How to Fight Forced Participation in AA, NA, or 12-Step Treatment (Tucson, AZ: See Sharp Press, 2000), by Stanton Peele (HTML at Wayback Machine)
- Alcoholics Anonymous: The Story of How Many Thousands of Men and Women Have Recovered From Alcoholism (New York: Works Pub. Co., 1947), by Bill W. (page images at HathiTrust; US access only)
- Alcoholics Anonymous: The Story of How More Than Fourteen Thousand Men and Women Have Recovered From Alcoholism (New York: Works Publishing, 1945), by Bill W. (page images at HathiTrust; US access only)
Filed under: Alcoholism in literatureFiled under: Alcoholism in motion picturesMore items available under broader and related terms at left. |