

Frankel's final assessment is: "Counting my blessings has been uplifting, reminding me of what's already great about my life. While she reached some of her goals, others had improved. Valerie Frankel of Good Housekeeping wrote an article about her trying the principles of The Secret for four weeks. Author Rhonda Byrne was later invited to her show along with people who swear by The Secret. On The Larry King Show she said that the message of The Secret is the message she's been trying to share with the world on her show for the past 21 years. US TV host Oprah Winfrey is a proponent of the book. Byrne has subsequently released Secret merchandise and several related books. Due partly to an appearance on The Oprah Winfrey Show, the book and film had grossed $300 million in sales by 2009. The book has been translated into 50 languages and has sold over 30 million copies. Later chapters describe how to improve one's prosperity, relationships, and health, with more general thoughts about the universe. This is based on a quotation from the Bible's Matthew 21:22: "And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive."īyrne highlights the importance of gratitude and visualization in achieving one's desires, along with alleged examples. Byrne cites a three-step process: ask, believe, and receive. Byrne provides examples of historical persons who have allegedly achieved this.

Synopsis īyrne re-introduces a notion originally popularized by persons such as Madame Blavatsky and Norman Vincent Peale that thinking about certain things will make them appear in one's life. The book served as the basis for the 2020 film The Secret: Dare to Dream. New York Times bestselling authors of The Passion Test, Janet Bray Attwood and Chris Attwood, are not featured in the film or the book, but arranged 36 of the 52 interviews for the film, many of which are referenced in the book. The book is influenced by Wallace Wattles' 1910 book The Science of Getting Rich, which Byrne received from her daughter during a time of personal trauma, in 2004. The Secret was released as a film in March 2006, and later the same year as a book. Scientific claims made in the book have been rejected by a range of critics, pointing out that the book has no scientific foundation. The book has sold 30 million copies worldwide and has been translated into 50 languages. The book alleges energy as assurance of its effectiveness.

It is based on the belief of the pseudoscientific law of attraction, which claims that thoughts can change a person's life directly. The Secret is a 2006 self-help book by Rhonda Byrne, based on the earlier film of the same name.
