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About Dick B.
Dick B. is an
active, recovered member of Alcoholics Anonymous; a retired attorney; and a
Bible student. He has sponsored 100 men in their recovery from
alcoholism. Consistent with A.A.'s traditions of anonymity, he uses the
pseudonym "Dick B."
Dick is the father of two
married sons (Ken and Don) and a grandfather. As a young man, he did a stint as
a newspaper reporter. He attended the University of California, Berkeley, where
he received his A.A. degree in economics with honors, and was elected to Phi
Beta Kappa in his Junior year. In the United States Army, he was an Information
Education Specialist. He received his A.B. and J.D. degrees from Stanford
University, and was Case Editor of the Stanford Law Review. Dick became
interested in Bible study in his childhood Sunday School and was much inspired
by his mother's almost daily study of Scripture. He joined, and later became
president of, a Community Church affiliated with the United Church of Christ. By
1972, he was studying the origins of the Bible and began traveling abroad in
pursuit of that subject. In 1979, he became much involved in a Biblical
research, teaching, and fellowship ministry. In his community life, he was
president of a merchants' council, Chamber of Commerce, church retirement
center, and homeowners' association. He served on a public district board and
was active in a service club.
In 1986, he was felled by
alcoholism, gave up his law practice, and began recovery as a member of the
Fellowship of Alcoholics Anonymous. In 1990, his interest in A.A.'s
Biblical/Christian roots was sparked by his attendance at A.A.'s International
Convention in Seattle. Since then, he has traveled widely; researched at
archives, and at public and seminary libraries; interviewed scholars,
historians, clergy, A.A. "old_timers" and survivors; and participated in
conferences, programs, panels, and seminars on early A.A.'s spiritual history.
Dick B.’s body of work on the
history and successes of early Alcoholics Anonymous includes seminars, books,
articles, radio interviews, videos, audio cassettes tapes, and newspaper
articles. They show how the basic, and highly successful, biblical ideas used by
early AAs can be valuable tools for success in today's A.A. Also, the religious
and recovery communities are using his research and titles to work more
effectively with alcoholics, addicts, and others involved in Twelve Step
programs.
Dick B. has published
25 titles and over 60 articles. These have been discussed in newspaper articles and reviewed in Library Journal,
Bookstore Journal, For A Change, The Living Church, Faith at Work, Sober Times,
Episcopal Life, Recovery News, Ohioana Quarterly, The PHOENIX, MRA Newsletter,
and the Saint Louis University Theology Digest.
Dick now, and usually, has several works in
progress. Much of his research and writing is done in collaboration with his
older son, Ken, who holds B.A., B.Th., and M.A. degrees. Ken has been a lecturer
in New Testament Greek at a Bible college and a lecturer in Fundamentals of Oral
Communication at San Francisco State University. Ken is a computer specialist.
Dick is a member of the American Historical
Association, Organization of American Historians, Coalition of Prison
Evangelists, Alcohol and Drugs History Society, Research Society on Alcoholism,
Association for Medical and Educational Research on Substance Abuse, Christian
Assn for Psychological Studies, and Phi Beta Kappa.
Dick B.'s email address is:
dickb@dickb.com. The
URL address for his web site on the history and successes of early Alcoholics
Anonymous is:
http://www.dickb.com/index.shtml.

http://aa-history.com/bookstore

Dick B. © 2005
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