by Russell H. Conwell (Author)
Russell H. Conwell's Acres of Diamonds is one of the classic American statements on opportunity, enterprise, self-reliance, and the value often hidden in familiar places. Built around Conwell's famous lecture and its central parable of a man who searches the world for wealth while overlooking the riches beneath his own feet, the book argues that success begins with attention, usefulness, character, and the ability to recognise possibility close at hand.
Conwell's message belongs to the older American tradition of practical improvement: work, thrift, service, ambition, education, and local opportunity. The book is direct, memorable, and unmistakably rooted in the language of its period, yet its central idea remains powerful for readers interested in personal success, entrepreneurship, business motivation, leadership, and the history of American self-help. Wealth, in Conwell's argument, is not merely a matter of chasing distant prospects, but of learning to see value where others see only ordinary ground.
This Wilder Publications edition presents a compact classic of motivational literature and practical philosophy. For readers interested in success classics, business self-improvement, opportunity, enterprise, prosperity thinking, public speaking, and American inspirational writing, Acres of Diamonds remains a short, forceful book about looking carefully, acting decisively, and making use of the resources already within reach.
Number of Pages: 100
Dimensions: 0.25 x 9 x 6 IN
Publication Date: January 21, 2008