32 Outstanding Books About Addiction Recovery

Katie McKenna • Oct 11, 2021

32 Outstanding Books About Addiction Recovery

Here is a list of recovery-based book recommendations that we have received from a wide variety of people in recovery. These are books that they have found to be inspiring and extremely helpful in their own personal recovery journeys. We hope you will check this out and find some hope and inspiration! There's a little something for everyone here! 


  1. This Naked Mind: Control Alcohol, Find Freedom, Discover Happiness & Change Your Life
  2. The Power of Now: A Guide to Spiritual Enlightenment
  3. The Unexpected Joy of Being Sober: Discovering a happy, healthy, wealthy alcohol-free life
  4. Recovery: Freedom from Our Addictions
  5. A New Pair of Glasses
  6. The Heart of Addiction: A New Approach to Understanding and Managing Alcoholism and Other Addictive Behaviors
  7. Living Clean: The Journey Continues
  8. A Happier Hour
  9. Prayers, Punk Rock and Pastry
  10. The Velvet Rage: Overcoming the Pain of Growing Up Gay in a Straight Man's World
  11. Recovery―The Sacred Art: The Twelve Steps as Spiritual Practice (The Art of Spiritual Living)
  12. The Alternative 12 Steps: A Secular Guide To Recovery
  13. Waiting: A Nonbeliever's Higher Power
  14. The Twelve Step Life Recovery Devotional: Thirty Meditations from Scripture for Each Step in Recovery
  15. Beyond Belief: Agnostic Musings for 12 Step Life: finally, a daily reflection book for nonbelievers, freethinkers and everyone
  16. Influence, New and Expanded: The Psychology of Persuasion
  17. Drop the Rock: Removing Character Defects - Steps Six and Seven
  18. The Four Agreements: A Practical Guide to Personal Freedom (A Toltec Wisdom Book)
  19. We Are the Luckiest: The Surprising Magic of a Sober Life
  20. Quit Like a Woman: The Radical Choice to Not Drink in a Culture Obsessed with Alcohol
  21. Million Little Pieces
  22. My Friend Leonard
  23. The Sober Diaries: How one woman stopped drinking and started living. By New York Times Bestseller
  24. Got the Life: My Journey of Addiction, Faith, Recovery, and Korn
  25. Codependent No More: How to Stop Controlling Others and Start Caring for Yourself
  26. Recovery Rx
  27. Moments of Clarity: Voices from the Front Lines of Addiction and Recovery
  28. Drinking: A Love Story
  29. The Boy Who Was Raised as a Dog: And Other Stories from a Child Psychiatrist's Notebook -- What Traumatized Children Can Teach Us About Loss, Love, and Healing
  30. Blackout: Remembering the Things I Drank to Forget
  31. Finding Ultra, Revised and Updated Edition: Rejecting Middle Age, Becoming One of the World's Fittest Men, and Discovering Myself
  32. Starting at Zero



By Megan Miller, CAC 29 Oct, 2024
I grew up full of fear. Everything terrified me. I never felt comfortable in my own skin. It wasn’t until I started smoking pot at 14—because I was too afraid to stand up to peer pressure—that I finally felt a sense of freedom and relaxation for the first time. I chased that high for the next 16 years. Somehow, I managed to graduate college with an OxyContin addiction, and after that, with nothing tethering me to the real world, things got a lot worse. I went to detox for the first of many times in 2005. I left there thinking I wasn’t an addict and that my use had just gotten out of control. That denial kept me in and out of treatment for the next decade. Heroin became my entire life. I couldn’t hold a job, I overdosed, I got Hepatitis C from sharing needles, and I didn’t care about anything except getting high. I was so full of shame at what my life had become, but I just couldn’t stop. I was great at trying to stop, but I couldn’t stay stopped. The gift of desperation came to me in April 2012. I couldn’t keep living the way I was. I finally wanted to live instead of die. That compulsion to use left me when I finally surrendered to it. Today, I wake up grateful for the life I have. My 6-year-old daughter is the greatest joy of my life, and she has never seen me use. Today, with the support of my wonderful husband, my family, and my recovery network, I live a full life of joy and purpose. There is no more rewarding feeling in the world than sharing the gift of recovery with others.
By Dave Aumiller, CPS, NCPRSS 03 Sep, 2024
Overdose. It’s a word that catches in my throat and a topic that stops me in my tracks. As a person in long-term recovery from Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) and Substance Use Disorder (SUD), I have overdosed many times. I have been revived by paramedics three times. Waking up in a hospital bed with no idea how I got there—scared. Or in the back of an ambulance, sick and angry for being Narcaned, a crazed hostage of my addicted mind. Or in a front yard, soaking wet from someone throwing me in a cold shower, unsuccessfully trying to revive me before leaving me outside—confused. These experiences don’t account for the countless times I have overdosed and been revived by a concerned party—now scarred by the trauma of my disease in its final stage, trying to carry out its final act, resulting in an untimely death. Overdose. After all of this, it was the kindness and care of others that made the difference between another chance and another day. Another dose of hope and life. An opportunity to begin again. On a day like today, reflecting on a topic that is so close to the heart of everyone connected to this reality, I am grateful. I am hopeful. I am humble. Because I know how lucky I am. How undeserving I was. And I live my amends and gratitude by doing my best to embody and live the values of a recovery that works. I also keep close to my heart, at the forefront of my mind, and on the tip of my tongue, the names of the countless others who weren’t as lucky as I. In honor of Overdose Awareness Day, I will say the names of my friends who weren’t fortunate enough to receive as many chances as I did, and I will live in their names—sober today and willing to extend a hand to anyone who needs it in their journey to recover and spread hope to both the sufferer and the caregiver.  Today, let us remember those we have lost, cherish the moments we have been given, and continue to fight for a future where overdose is a distant memory. Together, we can make a difference. Together, we can spread hope.
By Shannon Schwoeble, CPS 29 Aug, 2024
I was devastated when I heard that another close friend I'd made in treatment was gone. Seven friends in my first six months—two had come into treatment, left, and passed away while I was still there. In the years that followed, many others who had walked this path alongside me were lost as well. Nine in my first year of recovery. I found myself asking, "Why am I still here? Why didn’t they ‘get it’?"  Survivor’s guilt was not something I expected to experience in recovery. It hit me hard and fast when I began my journey in 2011. I was terrified. I would sit and think about friends I had just seen or spoken to—did they seem different? Did they sound off? I was so scared of who I would lose next. Through my work with a therapist and finding my own voice, I learned to transform my survivor's guilt into hope. I realized that by using my voice, sharing my story, saying their names, and talking about the profound impact each of them had on me—in life and in death—I could help others understand that recovery is possible. Perhaps, something I share will give someone struggling a glimmer of hope that they, too, can find recovery. On Overdose Awareness Day, August 31, we remember and honor those we've lost to this devastating disease. In loving memory of Ben, Pat, Krista, Harry, Christina, Brook, Dustin, Jeff, Jamie, and everyone we have lost—you are remembered and loved, today and every day.
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