A Special Condensation of One of the Most Radical and Effective Success Programs Ever Written This is no ordinary book. You are about to encounter Wallace D. Wattles’s brilliant and simple distillation of the inner path to wealth and success. Wattles, a social reformer and positive-mind pioneer, dedicated a lifetime to testing and distilling the principles of achievement espoused by the greatest minds in history. His slender classic The Science of Getting Rich is the result. In this abridgement you will quickly and efficiently discover: • How ideas shape the physical world. • Why creativity matters more than competition. • Why one passionately felt aim is the foundation of all achievement. • How your mental powers and practical abilities work together. Abridged and introduced by PEN Award-winning historian Mitch Horowitz, here is the dramatic and eye-opening masterwork by an incredibly bold thinker who had one simple aim: to bring riches to the masses of people. The Condensed Classics Library “40 Minutes to a New You”
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Wallace D. Wattles (1860–1911) was born in the United States in 1860, shortly before the Civil War. Later in life, he began his tireless study of the religious beliefs and philosophies of the world. It was through this relentless examination of such philosophers as Descartes, Hegel, and Ralph Waldo Emerson that he developed his own principles and successfully applied them to his life before he shared them with the world in his innovative 1910 book, The Science of Getting Rich. He died one year later. Wattles’ ideas have lived on to inspire future generations to greatness.
Mitch Horowitz is vice president and editor in chief at Tarcher/Penguin, the division of Penguin USA dedicated to metaphysical literature. He is the author of Occult America, which received the 2010 PEN Oakland/ Josephine Miles Award for literary excellence. He frequently writes about and discusses alternative spirituality in the national media, including CBS Sunday Morning, Dateline NBC, All Things Considered, the Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, and CNN.com.