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The Neville Goddard Deluxe Collection: All 14 Books By A New Thought Pioneer

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“Change your conception of yourself and you will automatically change the world in which you live. Do not try to change people; they are only messengers telling you who you are. Revalue yourself and they will confirm the change.”

Neville Goddard was a philosopher, spiritual teacher, and author who focused on the power of the mind. His teachings are based on New Thought spirituality, which combines principles of various religions and metaphysical ideas.

With this deluxe collection, get all 14 of Goddard's books.

564 pages, Paperback

Published November 30, 2022

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About the author

Neville Goddard

1,396 books1,658 followers
Neville Goddard was a writer, speaker and mystic. He taught various self-help methods for testing his own claim that the human imagination is omnificent, therefore God. He achieved popularity by reinterpreting the Bible and the poetry of William Blake.

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 17 of 17 reviews
4 reviews
February 1, 2023
Finally the truth about the bible

I studied the bible in depth for nearly 20 years before giving up on it as fiction. Now many years later, I finally have the truth of it. What a profound, world changing knowledge Goddard provides us. To think he was teaching when I was a teen. Now I find his teaching at 75. And it still has changed my life.
Profile Image for Eunique Williams.
11 reviews2 followers
November 24, 2024
This book is a must read. I can’t even put into words how transformative it is.
Profile Image for Rosamae Pejidoro.
26 reviews
April 30, 2023
Amazing Collection

For those seeking an in depth account of “the law”, look no further. The simplistic method of birthing your desires is so abundantly clear. With this collection you’ll find the answers and secret to fulfilling all you want to experience in life.
4 reviews2 followers
September 8, 2024
This book taught me a lot. I grew up in church and always felt disconnected from the whole experience. Neville has a way of putting the missing pieces together and making it all make sense. If you're curious about consciousness, give this a try. Its a fun way of seeing it.
Profile Image for Niha ❀.
18 reviews
September 17, 2025
The invaluable insights of Neville Goddard!! This book is a must read if you’re unsure where to start with his literature.
1 review
August 7, 2024
Reveals the Mysteries of the Bible.

I am now a senior citizen. From my childhood the Bible has always been a mystery to me. Maybe I am slower than the other children. This is the first inkling the message has penterated my being. I have listenened to these books several times on daily walks. Then I go home and read the chapters I have just listened to. I have done this for months. If you are looking for clarity in the Bible writings Neville Goddard’s style will assist you greatly. Highly recommend this set of books.
Profile Image for Ashe Magalhaes.
165 reviews24 followers
May 28, 2023
likely to be read over and over again throughout my life
Profile Image for Ollie Abilene.
23 reviews
October 9, 2024
I ended up reading this after being put on to Neville Goddard by a good friend of mine years ago. I snagged this hoping that it would help me improve my mindset about some stuff. To Goddard’s credit, I can confirm that reading the entirety of his work as collected in this book has helped to change my outlook on a lot of stuff in slight, positive ways, but I do wonder if any other girthy self-help book would have also accomplished that.

What I didn’t realize in picking up this book is that Goddard is essentially a failed cult figurehead. The ways that he justifies his revelations on metaphysics require more than a few citations, and the more you read, the more it becomes clear that this guy probably just did some drugs that are no longer on the market and had some kind of psychotic break while reading through the Bible. Time and time again, Goddard justifies his theories of manifestation that just don’t make any sense, and have the double-edged sword of being outright blasphemous to Christians, or out-of-place and totally unhelpful, not to mention nonsensical for non-believers. If you don’t believe me, check out the spine-serpent passage he references throughout and tell me what he was trying to say with that.

That leads me to another critique of this book, which I realize is somewhat unfair, but it’s a criticism I have nonetheless: Goddard really only has about ten or twenty pages’ worth of unique information to sell you. Everything else is just so repetitive. You get the feeling that every few years his coffers would empty and he’d decide it was time to write the same book over again in so many words in order to keep the checks coming (are you getting the culty vibes yet?), which means that I would never recommend that anyone read this book cover-to-cover like I did. If you’re a true believer of Neville’s, read like one chapter a day as a devotional and meditate on what he has to say. If you aren’t a disciple of New Thought and just want to see what this guy is about, just pick one of his books/essays, read it so long as it’s not just a tract brimming with Biblical stuff (you’ll know”, and feel satisfied that you’ve basically read the sum of his writing.

In terms of the actual beliefs of Neville, I don’t think I can really say I’m convinced — if this shit were real, that scene from “Bruce Almighty” where several hundred people all win the lottery at once would be happening every day in every city that has a lottery, forever. I think that it’s good to be able to sit and meditate and picture your desires, but only insofar as those images will motivate you to devise and execute the means by which you obtain them. I don’t think that picturing and having faith in your vision will motivate some magical, exterior force to actualize that vision, and Goddard smartly avoids ever assigning any qualities to this supposed force in his writing — to him, it just “is”. At least two of the books collected in this are basically just Neville quoting off reviews of his work. Unsurprisingly, nearly all of them involve money. Given that much of this was written during perhaps the most economically prosperous time and place in all of human history, I would hope that the casual reader would take these anecdotes with a grain of salt. I think the biggest issue I have with Neville’s ideology — beyond his ridiculously inflated claims of its efficacy — is that it takes a kind of Objectivist stance on people whose lives are poor or dominated by misfortune. Goddard even acknowledges that if someone’s life sucks, it’s because they don’t believe in themselves enough — while there are definitely situations where that is the case, I don’t think that’s a very moral or true way to look at our world, a world of effects caused by causes and causes and more causes. Goddard says that these the poor and unfortunate shouldn’t be looked down upon, but it’s a pretty jarring and disturbing way of looking at people nonetheless.

For all the negative things I can say, I have been practicing some of the visualization techniques espoused by Goddard in his writing, and have found them useful. I have attempted lately to drastically cut down on how much I let myself feel or wallow in negativity, and it’s been kind of an eye-opener. So I can thank Neville for that — it just didn’t take over 500 pages of mostly repetition and nonsense to make me realize that.
Profile Image for Roya.
139 reviews4 followers
June 23, 2025
Reading this book really made the law of assumption click for me. it goes into the why and how of the law, has many detailed success stories, and breaks down and interprets the meaning of the bible in relation to the law. The writing is plain and laid out clearly over and over. It has several “techniques” you can use and explains why and how they work, which was always missing or not explained well enough by other people. If you’re struggling with the law, you need to read the source. Then the paraphrased stuff everyone else gives will make sense.
92 reviews
February 4, 2024
I discovered Neville Goddard from a subreddit. There was so much hype behind his books that it convinced me to read. Oh boy, it was hard to read. There were so many mumbo-jumbo religious quotes and interpretations. 50% in the book, it was leading to nowhere. I prefer the interpretation of EdwardArtSupplyHands. I'd skip this book, and read something else like Power of the Subconcious.
Profile Image for Fairy Biba.
Author 2 books
July 10, 2024
Awesome, but still about mental science books for a more deep reading about it I suggest Thomas Troward and Ernest Holmes that are really the top of the tops and explain all the subject way deeper and talking about all since the beginning of our existence
Profile Image for Drea.
64 reviews
December 17, 2024
I loved this book, does anyone have any shorter more applicable to 2024 books they recommend keeping this theme?
Profile Image for Rosemary Schwartz.
88 reviews4 followers
January 23, 2025
I'm so glad I bought this book! It's packed full of so much insight under the law of assumption. Taking a psychological trip into the Bible and its much deeper meanings. 💥
Profile Image for Grace Cinco.
1 review
July 28, 2025
Mind blowing!

One of the best book I’ve read. This is recommended❤️❤️❤️❤️ I love how the author describe the bible in psychological drama.
14 reviews
November 29, 2025
The first book that introduced me to manifestation. I love how the writers connect their own ideas with the bible. I also love how the writer put all the success stories by everyone or even by the writer himself, at the end of every chapter.
Displaying 1 - 17 of 17 reviews

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