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White Dove Books – Personal Development, Self Growth and Motivation

October 21st, 2009 admin No comments

White Dove Books has over 50,000 pages of top-quality self improvement information for you to enjoy.

White Dove BooksWe also have a Special Gift for you just for visiting us today. In this book, you will find some of the most wonderful & inspiring stories to lift your spirits and encourage you on your personal journey.

Free Books
Our Free Books section includes books on Self Growth, Goals & Goalsetting, Law of Attraction, Wealth & Prosperity and Health & Fitness.

Resources
Our Resources section provides a comprehensive set of tools for self improvement as well as many other excellent downloads including eBooks, Videos & MP3s.

Online Books
The Online Books section includes some of the best known and most-loved works from the field of self help including some of the best examples of New Thought. Read more…

A Proven Program of Cognitive Techniques for Assessing, Improving, and Maintaining Your Self-Esteem

July 19th, 2009 admin 5 comments

A Proven Program of Cognitive Techniques

Since its first publication in 1987, Self-Esteem has become the first choice of therapists and savvy readers looking for a comprehensive, self-care approach to improving self-image, increasing personal power, and defining core values. More than 600,000 copies of this book have helped literally millions of readers feel better about themselves, achieve greater success, and enjoy their lives to the fullest.

You can do it, too! Read more…

50 Self-Help Classics: 50 Inspirational Books to Transform Your Life

July 16th, 2009 admin No comments

Product Features:

  • ISBN13: 9781857883237
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

This is the first and only “bitesized” guide to the works that have captured the imagination of millions and inspired readers everywhere to follow their dreams.

50 Self-Help Classics: 50 Inspirational Books to Transform Your Life” Reviews:

Review by Adam Khan
Rate:
This is the only book I’ve ever read that made me jealous. I’m the author of the book Self-Help Stuff That Works, published in 1999, and I’ve never come across its equal (at least in my own biased opinion) until now. Many times while reading this book I felt jealous. Tom Butler-Bowdon has done things I wish I had done. And he writes with a powerful clarity I admire.

Sometimes an author can say what another author has said, but say it clearer and better than the original author. Tom has done that in these pages. He often gets across the message of the original book with far more clarity and punch than the original ever had.

Each classic has its own chapter and each chapter is wonderfully short. There is never a dull moment. The book has a lot of nice features too: pithy quotes from the original book, a summary of the main point of each classic, and recommended books in a similar vein. At the end of each chapter is a short biography of the author. While reading this book I could feel that the author was really making sure I got my money’s worth (and he succeeded).

I have already read most of the fifty books, and it was wonderful to have the meat of those books extracted and laid bare. With Tom’s book in my possession, I can now review one of these classics quickly and easily. Repetition is vital to learning, and yet I often don’t re-read books because it is so time-consuming, even though I know I could be helped by a review of the material. Now I can review them without investing a lot of time.

Tom clearly didn’t choose these fifty books based on popularity. This is an excellent selection. The fifty classics are well-chosen and represent a balanced coverage of the field. Tom includes many of my favorite books of all time: Flow, Feeling Good, How to Win Friends, The Art of Happiness, Self-Reliance, Learned Optimism, Man’s Search For Meaning, and on and on. This book also introduced me to some material I would never have picked up off the shelf, but I’m glad I have been introduced to it. I loved the chapter on Beothius.

You could think of this book as Cliffs Notes for self-help books. Reading it would be a great way to shop for just the right book to read next.

It was great to find the Bhagavad Gita in this context (that is, as a self-help book, which is truly one of the things it is). Reading Tom’s explanation of the overall thrust of the Bhagavad Gita helped me understand it better than I ever have.

The author does not talk down to the reader, doesn’t write at a fourth grade level, and yet this is clear and easy reading. And even so, the writing is penetrating, insightful, and intelligent. If you want to learn how to change your thoughts, how to find your best direction in life and accomplish it, how to become happier, how to change your perspective, if you want to explore yourself and make a difference in the world, you’ll find more than enough juicy nuggets here to satisfy.

Review by Robert Morris
Rate:
In both this volume and in 50 Success Classics, Butler-Bowdon has selected and then provided a rigorous examination of carefully selected works which have had, for decades, a profound impact on those who read them and then applied the principles which their respective authors affirm. In this instance, inspiration and guidance to transform one’s life. There are several reasons why I hold this volume in such high regard. Here are three.

First, Butler-Bowdon has assembled excerpts and focused on key points from a wide variety of works which include (with authors listed in alphabetical order, as in the book), Marcus Aurelius’ Meditations, Robert Bly’s Iron John, Joseph Campbell with Bill Moyers’ The Power of Myth, Dale Carnegie’s How to Win Friends and Influence People, the Dalai Lama and Howard C. Cutler’s The Art of Happiness, Wayne Dyer’s Real Magic, Ralph Waldo Emerson’s Self-Reliance, Benjamin Franklin’s Autobiography, Lao Tzu’s Tao Te Ching, Abraham Maslow’s Motivation and Personality, Thomas Moore’s Care of the Soul, Joseph Murphy’s The Power of Your Subconscious Mind, Ayn Rand’s Atlas Shrugged, and Henry David Thoreau’s Walden. Obviously, some of this material would also be appropriate for inclusion in 50 Success Classics.

Second, I appreciate the fact that Butler-Bowdon also enables his readers to focus on specific themes of greatest interest to them by suggesting combinations of selections as follows:

The Power of Thought: Change your thoughts, change your life

Following Your Dream: Achievement and goal setting

Secrets of Happiness: Doing what you love, doing what works

The Bigger Picture: Keeping it in perspective

Soul and Mystery: Appreciating your depth

Making a Difference: Transforming yourself, transforming the world

The diversity of Butler-Bowdon’s primary sources is indeed impressive even when grouped according to a common theme.

Third and finally, he makes clever use of a number of reader-friendly devices throughout his narrative, such as “In a nutshell,” “Final comments,” and a brief bio of the author at the conclusion of each selection. I also appreciate the inclusion of brief quotations wherever they are most relevant.

In the Introduction, Butler-Bowdon observes that a self-help book “can be your best friend and champion, expressing a faith in your essential greatness and beauty that is sometimes hard to get from another person. Because of its emphasis on following your star and believing that your thoughts can remake your world, a better name for self-help writing might be the `literature of possibility.’ Many people are amazed that the self-help sections in bookstores are so huge. For the rest of us, there is no mystery. Whatever recognizes our right to dream, then shows us how to make the dream a reality, is powerful and valuable.”

What he offers is by no means a buffet of motivational “hors d’oeuvres.” On the contrary, the content selected is solid and skillfully presented within an appropriate context. I am convinced that many of those who read this book will be encouraged to read (or re-read) many of the primary sources in their entirety. If Butler-Bowdon’s efforts accomplish nothing else, that will indeed be sufficient to earn the praise I think he has earned…and justly deserves.

Review by Jaewoo Kim
Rate:
This book contains approximately 50 essays of around 3 doublespaced pages. Each essay tries to explain complex topics such as human motivation, biblical wisdom, and pyshcological complexities of humans. Needless to say, no essay satisfies any single topic due to its extremely shallow coverage. For example, the book tries to explain the wisdom of Buddhism in 3 doublespaced pages. I found them practically useless.

This is an ideal book to buy if you want to SAMPLE all the self help ideas out there before you choose to delve into one.

Overall Rating: (out of 36 reviews)

Price: $ 12.31

How to Achieve Leadership Qualities in Pyramids

July 22nd, 2008 admin No comments

"Leadership Qualities in Pyramids"

We can write about 500 articles or more or countless of books on how to achieve leadership qualities in pyramids by unleashing the leader instincts in you. However, after all the information is written it will basically sum up the same Leadership Qualities in Pyramids 1thing. Likewise, we could spend hours telling you how to unleash instincts to leaders inside you, however if you fail to see the point or put forth the effort all our words are in vane. Yet, a good leader will make you listen in how to unleashing leader instincts inside of you, rather than having you fail to see the points.

Leader over their influences in many ways, however most times they focus on telling others how to learn, explaining how they can learn, and teaching the people how to learn. Leaders will not only teach, inform, and explain, they will also set positive examples for people to understand. The leader will become a role model for others to follow and will relate to other peoples feelings, thoughts, understandings, and the like.

Leaders make a pyramid out of qualities and tools they will use to help others learn, grow and so on. These people realize how hard it was for them to get where they are in life. The leader will consider others as he teaches, explains and so forth, by providing assertive messages, convictions, dependability, and examples. Read more…