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Literature

You can buy most SA and AA books at our in-person meetings in Israel.

You can also order online from the SA Central Office or on Amazon.

About our books

The SA program is built on three books:

  • The AA Big Book (Alcoholics Anonymous)
  • AA’s Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions, and
  • The SA White Book (Sexaholics Anonymous).

Our Basic Text

The basic text of our fellowship is titled: Sexaholics Anonymous. It is often referred to as the “White Book,” since the front and back cover are solid white in an attempt to preserve the reader’s privacy. This includes an excellent overview of sexaholism, practical methods of working the 12 steps and much more. For many of us, reading this book Readings gave us a clear insight into both the nature of the disease and the nature of the solution. It became clear that the power of this illness was far too much for us to overcome on our own and we needed a fellowship (SA), a practical approach to recovery, and a Higher Power to help us.

Other SA Materials Include:

Recovery Continues: A collection of writings from the experience of pioneering members of SA as they continued to pursue sexual sobriety and recovery over the years.
Step Into Action: A Step guide, published by Sexaholics Anonymous, to help members work the 12 Steps of SA.
Discovering The Principles: A collection of writings from pioneering members of SA as it relates to their experience of applying the Twelve Traditions in their group, in their lives and in the fellowship at large.
Essay: A quarterly SA publication composed of essays submissions on recovery-related topics from SA members worldwide.

Using AA Books in SA

Please note: All Alcoholics Anonymous Literature is approved for SA Meetings

The SA program is based on the principles and traditions of Alcoholics Anonymous. All AA literature is approved for use in SA meetings. The seminal texts for 12-Step recovery from addiction, ‘Alcoholics Anonymous’, and the subsequent, ‘Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions’, are used frequently in SA meetings.

Note: The Twelve Steps and Traditions are adapted with permission of Alcoholics Anonymous World Services, Inc. (“AAWS”). Permission to adapt and reprint the Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions does not mean that AAWS has approved the contents, of this publication, nor that AAWS agrees with the views expressed herein. AA is a program of recovery from alcoholism only. Use of the Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions in connection with programs which are patterned after AA, but which address other problems, or in any other non-AA context, does not imply otherwise.

SA adaptation © 1982, 1984, 1989, 2001 SA Literature. Reprinted with permission of SA Literature.