A serious book on manifestation

The Great Secret of Life

A practical synthesis of the masters
who knew how reality really works.

80 pages · Read Online + Download PDF · $39.90

Read the Book Now

There is a tradition you weren't told about.

It was not invented in 2006 by an Australian documentary filmmaker. It was not invented in 1937 by a man named Napoleon Hill. Its roots reach back at least to the 1830s — to a clockmaker in Maine who began healing the chronically ill by changing what they believed about their own bodies.

For nearly two centuries, a series of writers and teachers refined his insight into a body of specific, teachable techniques. A handful of them — Wallace Wattles, Neville Goddard, Joseph Murphy, Napoleon Hill, Ernest Holmes, and a private Manhattan teacher known only as Abdullah — produced the work the modern "manifestation" industry has been quietly repackaging ever since.

This is the first booklet to bring all six of them together, treat each one on his own terms, and give you the practical thirty-day path that follows from what they shared.

What's inside

Six teachers. One tradition. Eighty pages.

Neville Goddard

1905 – 1972

The Barbadian mystic who built the most rigorous version of the Law of Assumption. This chapter covers his four core techniques, the famous Barbados story, and the radical teaching that "everyone is you pushed out."

Abdullah

dates uncertain

The forgotten teacher who trained both Neville and Joseph Murphy in a small Manhattan study, then never published a word himself. The connecting thread that runs through the entire booklet.

Wallace Wattles

1860 – 1911

The dying Illinois farmer who wrote The Science of Getting Rich in 1910. The unattributed seed text of nearly every modern manifestation book — including The Secret.

Joseph Murphy

1898 – 1981

The Irish pharmacist turned New Thought minister who wrote The Power of Your Subconscious Mind (15 million copies sold). The most accessible single book in the tradition.

Napoleon Hill

1883 – 1970

The most commercially successful and historically dubious figure in the tradition. The chapter is honest about the fraud and isolates the few genuinely useful ideas (Burning Desire, the Mastermind).

Ernest Holmes

1887 – 1960

The systematic theologian whose 600-page Science of Mind (1926) is the most rigorous philosophical exposition the entire movement ever produced. The five-step Spiritual Mind Treatment is his.

The chapter for the sake of which the other eight were written

The Thirty-Day Practical Path

The booklet ends with a structured thirty-day program, designed to be done by an ordinary person, in the middle of ordinary life, in twenty minutes a day.

Week 1

Awareness

Identifying the current state and the assumptions producing it.

Week 2

Construction

Building the new state — the single short scene that produces the result.

Week 3

Inhabitation

Carrying the new state through the day, including Neville's Revision practice.

Week 4

Persistence

Holding the state through the plateau when most practitioners quietly give up.

By Day 30, you will know — on the evidence of your own thirty days, not anyone else's testimony — whether the techniques in this booklet do what their authors say they do.

What you get

One payment. Lifetime access.

$39.90

Buy the Booklet Now

30-day money-back guarantee. If after thirty days of honest practice you find the booklet has been useless to you, write to hello@thegreatsecret.co and we will refund every cent. No questions, no forms.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is this just another book on manifestation?

No. It is a book about the actual teachers whose work the modern manifestation literature has been quietly summarizing for forty years. It is the source material, treated as source material, with the lineage restored and the practical method intact.

How is this different from The Secret?

The Secret (2006) is one curated, simplified retelling of one of the six teachers in this book — Wallace Wattles, whom Rhonda Byrne credits as her source. This booklet covers Wattles and five other masters, distinguishes where they agreed and disagreed, and gives you a thirty-day program designed by reading all six of them together.

Who wrote it?

The booklet is published by The Great Secret Press. The editor's contribution is the synthesis, the practical program, and the original commentary; the teachings belong to the six named authors and are properly attributed throughout.

How long will it take to read?

About three hours, cover to cover. The thirty-day program takes thirty days.

Do I read it in the browser, or download it?

Either. Both. You receive a license key that unlocks the online reader at thegreatsecret.co/read (works on any device, no app or sign-up required), and you receive the full PDF by email so you can read offline, print it, or send it to your Kindle. Most readers use both.

Will the techniques work for me?

The booklet does not promise this. It tells you what the six teachers claimed, why they claimed it, and how to test their claims for yourself in thirty days. After Day 30, you will know.

Is there a refund policy?

Yes. Thirty days, no questions, full refund. The condition is honest practice for the thirty days — but we will not ask you to prove it.