NOT EVEN A PENNY FROM HILL’S
BILLIONAIRE BENEFACTOR
When steel baron Andrew Carnegie convinced Napoleon Hill to take on the
task of researching and writing the world’s first philosophy of
success, he warned Hill that it would take twenty years to complete and
he would have to do it on his own. Carnegie explained that his
contribution would be to introduce Hill to the most successful and
influential men in the world so Hill could learn their secrets of
success, but Carnegie made it clear that he would not pay Hill a salary
and, in fact, it would be up to Hill to finance the costs of the
research. Hill accepted the challenge, and to support himself, his
family, and the research, Hill launched several businesses. He turned
himself into a sales trainer, an advertising and marketing consultant,
an educator, a lecturer, a writer, and perhaps most important, he
became a magazine publisher.
HILL’S MAGAZINES WERE A SENSATION
Between 1918 and 1924, Napoleon Hill launched and published two monthly
magazines: Hill’s Golden Rule and Napoleon Hill’s Magazine.
As he set out to put together the first issue, Hill very quickly found
himself faced with a lot of blank pages and little money to pay
writers, so he wrote every word of the first issues himself. In fact,
it was the need to fill the pages that prompted Hill to begin
committing to paper the secrets he learned from Carnegie’s famous
friends, and to turn his own personal triumphs and failures into
lessons. It was a winning combination and the magazine sold out. The
public was anxious to read what Hill had to say, and Napoleon Hill was
never at a loss for words!
HE WROTE TENS OF THOUSANDS
OF WORDS EVERY MONTH
The success of the first issues opened the floodgates, and from
Hill’s typewriter there flowed a monthly torrent of feature
stories, philosophical essays, self-help and how-to articles, and
inspirational tales offering advice and hope for those struggling to
overcome their life’s circumstances. It was in these magazine
articles that Hill honed his theories, refined his arguments, and
polished his presentation of the success philosophy for the common man
that Carnegie had envisioned. The material that filled the pages of
Hill’s Golden Rule and Napoleon Hill’s Magazine are the
original versions of the lessons that five years later would become the
basis of Hill’s masterwork Law of Success, and tens years after
that, his international bestseller Think and Grow Rich.
NOW AVAILABLE IN A COLLECTOR’S EDITION
Now, for the first time, Napoleon Hill’s First Editions presents
the best of Napoleon Hill’s early works compiled in a beautiful
collector’s edition, each article introduced by a reproduction of
the original magazine cover from which the story or essay is reprinted.