21,99 €
inkl. MwSt.
Versandkostenfrei*
Versandfertig in 1-2 Wochen
payback
11 °P sammeln
  • Gebundenes Buch

"…Do not wait for an opportunity to be all that you want to be; be all that you can today, and when an opportunity to be more is offered to you, take it..." -Wallace D. Wattles How to Promote Yourself, after being first published as Making the Man Who Can in 1909, was republished in 1914. This book shows how to become the man, or woman, who can live a successful, powerful life, and how to achieve it. Some of the themes are familiar from Wallace Wattles' other books, but repetition is the mother of learning. These teachings are as inspiring as they were a century ago as evidenced by the 2006…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
"…Do not wait for an opportunity to be all that you want to be; be all that you can today, and when an opportunity to be more is offered to you, take it..." -Wallace D. Wattles How to Promote Yourself, after being first published as Making the Man Who Can in 1909, was republished in 1914. This book shows how to become the man, or woman, who can live a successful, powerful life, and how to achieve it. Some of the themes are familiar from Wallace Wattles' other books, but repetition is the mother of learning. These teachings are as inspiring as they were a century ago as evidenced by the 2006 hit movie and bestseller The Secret by Rhonda Byrne and the practice of many self-help gurus.
Autorenporträt
Wallace Delois Wattles was an American who wrote about New Thought. He lived from 1860 to 1911. He isn't very well known as a person, but his writing is still used in the New Thought and self-help groups and is still in print. Wattles's most well-known work is a book he wrote in 1910 called The Science of Getting Rich. In it, he talks about how to get rich. Florence wrote that in the three years before he died, "he made a lot of money and was healthy, except that he was very weak." Wattles died in Ruskin, Tennessee, on February 7, 1911. His body was taken home to be buried in Elwood, Indiana. As a sign of respect, all of the companies in the town closed for two hours in the afternoon of the day of his funeral. His daughter thought it was "untimely" that he died at age 51, because in the year before, he had written two books (The Science of Being Well and The Science of Getting Rich) and ran for public office.