Revisit a timeless and enduring exploration of
relationships and human connection
How to Win Friends and Influence People, one of the
bestselling self-help books ever written, offers an enduring and insightful
account of human nature that promises to improve your ability to relate to
those around you. It provides grounded and straightforward techniques for being
more persuasive and relatable, helping you move people toward your point of
view without being abrasive.
This Capstone Classic edition of the celebrated book by Dale
Carnegie comes with a brand-new introduction by self-help scholar Tom
Butler-Bowdon and serves as an ideal entry point to the work for readers who
have never read it, as well as those who would like to revisit its timeless
lessons. You’ll discover:
- Simple,
easy-to-implement strategies for persuasion and connection in a wide
variety of personal and professional settings
- Tips
on how to cultivate and enjoy genuine interest in other people as the key
to influence
- Techniques
to make others feel important, valued, and comfortable around you
A must-read for everyone interested in improving their
relationships with the people most important to them in life and at work, How
to Win Friends and Influence People remains one of the most
groundbreaking approaches to relationship management and human connection. As
human nature does not change, it’s as relevant and critical today as when first
released in 1936.
About the Author
Dale Carnegie (1888-1955) was an American writer
and lecturer. Following a career as a salesman he developed courses on public
speaking and confidence-building which were given across America. The courses
evolved into How To Win Friends and Influence People, which became
the bestselling non-fiction title of its time. Carnegie’s insight was that the
most successful people in any organisation are not those with the most
experience or expertise, but who have the best people skills―and these skills
can be learned.
Tom Butler-Bowdon is editor of the Capstone
Classics series and has written introductions to Machiavelli’s The
Prince, Marcus Aurelius’ Meditations, Napoleon Hill’s Think
and Grow Rich, and Wallace Wattles’ The Science of Getting Rich.
A graduate of the London School of Economics, he is also the author of 50
Self-Help Classics, 50 Success Classics, and 50
Psychology Classics.