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The Secrets of Life

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The thoughts and ideas in this book form the basis of Stuart Wilde’s philosophy on how to develop a more liberated mind-set and thus, a more carefree and delightful life. The thoughts and essays are from his best-selling books as well as his unpublished writings. You can just open the book anywhere and start reading. Usually you’ll find that the first few pages you read will feature some helpful hints that are very relevant to some aspect of your current life—somehow synchronicity will always lead you to exactly what you need to know. So if you want your spiritual concepts “short and sweet,” then this book will suit you perfectly. As Stuart says, “Any philosophy that you can’t haul down to the bank or up to the airport ain’t worth having!”

304 pages, Paperback

First published October 1, 2006

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About the author

Stuart Wilde

75 books152 followers
Wilde was born in Farnham, England. He was educated at St. George’s College, Weybridge, Surrey. After his schooling he joined the English Stage Company in Sloane Square, London. A year later he opened a jeans business in Carnaby Street London, at the height of the Swinging Sixties where he enjoyed considerable commercial success.

He studied alternative religions and Taoist philosophy for five years from the age of twenty-eight, and when he was thirty-three, he emigrated to the United States of America where lived in Laguna Beach, California with his first wife Cynthia. He wrote his first book, Miracles, in 1983.

Shortly thereafter he began a career as a lecturer appearing mainly in New Thought Churches and at New Age conferences. In the 1990s he toured regularly with Deepak Chopra, Dr. Wayne Dyer and Louise Hay, appearing at venues such as the Sydney Entertainment Centre.

tuart Wilde is a prolific writer, with eighteen of his books published to date. They appear in more than fifteen foreign languages, with a total of ninety-three different books and audio works in circulation.[2]

He executive produced and was the lyricist on the music album Voice of the Feminine Spirit (1994), which sold several hundred-thousand copies. He later produced and was the lyricist on two albums of Celtic music, Voice of the Celtic Myth (1997), and Creation (1999), and wrote the book and libretto for Tim Wheater’s oratorio Heartland (1995).

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
212 reviews6 followers
May 8, 2019
it is a book of life lessons. Somethings I could relate to and others i couldn't /wouldn't do. May real life application would be more time consuming but reading was short and fun !
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50 reviews2 followers
March 4, 2024
Parts were profound. Parts were chauvinistic and clearly written from a place of supremacy and privilege. Mixed bag.
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