William Walker Atkinson might be the most famous and influential inspirational writer you have never heard of.
I say that because Atkinson at one time was extremely popular, but somehow while his ideas have continued to flourish, his name has been largely forgotten. With one exception (which I’ll mention later), his books are difficult to find, relegated to print-on-demand status. It is my hope that this volume—one of the inaugural books in the Library of Spiritual Wisdom series, which was created to bring the spiritual classics of the 19th and 20th Centuries to modern readers—brings some of Atkinson’s most potent and timeless books to many new readers. He deserves a wide readership.
Atkinson was a lawyer, author, publisher, editor, and speaker. Born in Baltimore in 1862, Atkinson married Margaret Foster Black, had two children, became a lawyer, and moved to Chicago. That last sentence sums up years of his life in just a few words, but there is much about Atkinson that we do not know.
What we do know, mostly through his articles and writings, is that at one point his life took a difficult turn. He suffered a physical and emotion breakdown, as well as financial ruin. It was then that he found books on mental healing. Chicago at that time was a hot spot for the fast-growing New Thought philosophy, the philosophy based on transcendentalism as well as mesmerism and mental science. He studied with two of New Thought’s most formidable and influential leaders, Helen Wilmans and Emma Curtis Hopkins.
Atkinson’s mind, body, and finances were all healed using the ideas from New Thought. He began writing articles about his experiences and about the metaphysical ideas that he now embraced. And shortly after that, he began writing books.
He also began working with several New Thought magazines, including New Thought Magazine, Advanced Thought, and eventually Nautilus magazine, which was founded and headed by early New Thought publisher Elizabeth Towne.
Eventually he began to publish books through his own publishing companies, the Yogi Publication Society and Advance Thought Publishing Company.
Here’s where his story gets interesting, at least to me. Atkinson was incredibly prolific, and he wrote many books about his main interests, which included mental science, New Thought, psychic studies, numerology, the occult, natural health and wellness, and also Eastern philosophy, especially Hinduism, which he had become interested in. During his lifetime, he wrote well over a hundred books, which is a remarkable achievement.
However, instead of just publishing them all under his own name, he evidently created a series of pseudonyms, each with a different emphasis. For example, the books under his own name dealt with mental sciences, the occult, divination, and spiritual success. His books with Eastern and Hindu influences were written under the name Swami Ramachakara. He also published under the names Swami Bhakta Vishita and Swami Panchadasi, and these books were largely about clairvoyance, psychic thought, and life after death. His pseudonym Theron Q. Dumont focused on mental power, self-improvement, self-confidence, memory, and concentration. The health and wellness titles were published under the name of Theodore Sheldon, and the esoteric studies, such as Rosicrucianism, were published with the name Magus Incognito. There were other pseudonyms as well.
Notice that I said he evidently published books with pseudonyms. He never revealed one way or another if he authored those, and in fact even created elaborate stories of who some of these “authors” were. However, there doesn’t seem to be evidence of these “other” authors actually existing. Not to mention, those books all had the same “feel” as the books published under his own name. It is widely accepted that he was the author of the books under these pseudonyms.
His most famous pseudonym, was known as “the Three Initiates,” who authored a book that claimed to be of authentic Hermetic wisdom, called The Kybalion. This book ended up being his bestseller, the book that he is best known for today, though most readers of the book don’t know that the name of the author is actually William Walker Atkinson. There is some question as to the authorship, whether he wrote the book by himself, or with others, or even at all, but careful study of The Kybalion reveals that there is a vast probability that Atkinson was the sole author of the book. (The Kybalion is available as a part of the Essential Wisdom Library series from St. Martin’s Essentials, with a foreword by me as well).
While his pseudonyms are fascinating, the books he wrote under his own name are equally fascinating.
In one of his earliest books, under his own name, he discussed the concept of “the law of attraction,” one of the first writers to use that term, which has become widely known and taught in recent years, through books such as The Secret, and those written by Wayne Dyer and others. Many of his other ideas are now commonplace as well, and some are still ahead of their time.
The ten books in this volume—each original and complete—showcase a man with a brilliant mind and charismatic personality. While the language is of the times when he wrote them, his ideas are timely and practical and valuable. You can tell as you read these books that he truly wants to help readers improve their lives. They are written in a motivational, personal style, totally graspable and applicable for the modern reader.
Yes, some of the stories or examples are dated, but the ideas behind those examples transcend the time he wrote them. After all, Atkinson would be the first to tell us that he didn’t invent these ideas, he only wrote about them in a way that made them understandable.
He was incredibly clear in his writing. Look at even the titles he used:
The reader can tell exactly what each book is about, and Atkinson more than delivers. His confidence in and love of the ideas in his books burst forth from every paragraph. Reading his books is more than instructional, it is joyful.
In Atkinson’s later years, he become involved in the International New Thought Alliance, and in fact was their president at one point. He ran his publishing businesses, remained an active lawyer, popular speaker, and influential New Thought teacher.
He died in 1932, just shy of his 70th birthday. His publishing company continued to publish his books for decades, but otherwise he left behind no organization or “center” that taught his principles and ideas. Perhaps that is why his name isn’t well known in this time. His books didn’t have an author or organization to keep them fresh in the minds of readers. However, as you read his books, you’ll begin to see his ideas, from these books written more than a century ago, in today’s current bestsellers. Whenever I notice it, I pause and smile, knowing that Atkinson’s influence is still being felt today.
As I mentioned at the start of this foreword, nearly all of his books, most in the public domain, are today only available in often-substandard print-on-demand editions, or error-filled ebooks. This volume, which I hope is the first of many, aims to not only bring his books back, but do so in a way that honors his work as it deserves. The plan is to publish future volumes, keeping his books separated by his pseudonyms.
My hope is that as you read the ten books in the volume, you will discover the very principles that speak directly to you, and inspire you to live a deeper, richer, more joyous life. Atkinson may have died and his name has seemed to fade, but his ideas can come alive within you, and within me. In that way, Atkinson is still with us, still doing what he strove to do his entire adult life, which was to help readers live the life they were meant to live. With that thought in mind, turn the page and let the adventure—your adventure—begin.…
—Joel Fotinos