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The Greatest Salesman in the World

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"I will live this day as if it is my last."

— Og Mandino, The Greatest Salesman in the World (1968)

Introduction

The Greatest Salesman in the World
Full titleThe Greatest Salesman in the World
AuthorOg Mandino
LanguageEnglish
SubjectSalesmanship; Success; Personal development
GenreNonfiction; Self-help
PublisherFrederick Fell
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint (hardcover, paperback); e-book; audiobook
Pages108
Goodreads rating4.2/5  (as of 4 November 2025)
Websitepenguinrandomhouse.com

The Greatest Salesman in the World is a compact self-help parable first published in New York in 1968 by Frederick Fell, running 108 pages in its first edition. [1] It frames its teachings as ten “ancient scrolls” that coach readers in habits, persistence, love, emotional mastery, and allied disciplines meant to be practiced in daily life. [2] Told as a fable about Hafid, a young camel boy whose fortunes rise with each scroll’s lesson, the book adopts a plain, exhortative register to turn big ideas into repeatable actions. [2] It has remained a durable backlist hit, with more than five million copies in print. [2] The title still appears on Publishers Weekly’s Religion Fiction bestseller charts—peaking at No. 1 on 14 August 2023 for the Bantam mass-market edition—underscoring its long tail. [3]

Chapter summary

This outline follows the Bantam mass market paperback edition (New York: Bantam, [1991?], 111 pp., ISBN 978-0-553-27757-9).[4] First-edition publication details: Frederick Fell (New York, 1968), 108 pp.[1] See also: Bantam reprint noted as “Reprint of the 1968 edition published by F. Fell, New York.”[5]

🛕 1 – Chapter One.

🧭 2 – Chapter Two.

🐪 3 – Chapter Three.

🧣 4 – Chapter Four.

🌟 5 – Chapter Five.

🕊️ 6 – Chapter Six.

🌙 7 – Chapter Seven.

📜 8 – The Scroll Marked I.

❤️ 9 – The Scroll Marked II.

💪 10 – The Scroll Marked III.

🌿 11 – The Scroll Marked IV.

12 – The Scroll Marked V.

🎭 13 – The Scroll Marked VI.

😂 14 – The Scroll Marked VII.

📈 15 – The Scroll Marked VIII.

16 – The Scroll Marked IX.

🙏 17 – The Scroll Marked X.

Background & reception

🖋️ Author & writing. Og Mandino was a widely read inspirational author and former president of Success Unlimited; he received the Napoleon Hill Gold Medal for literary achievement and recognition from the National Speakers Association. [6] The book first appeared in 1968 with Frederick Fell (108 pp.), establishing the ten-scroll framework that powers its narrative arc. [1] Bantam later reissued the work; WorldCat records the Bantam reprint as a “Reprint of the 1968 edition published by F. Fell, New York.” [7] Current Penguin Random House listings show multiple formats (e.g., a 1983 mass-market of 128 pp. and a 2025 trade paperback of 112 pp.), reflecting format-driven pagination rather than substantive revision. [2]

📈 Commercial reception. Publisher materials report “more than five million copies in print,” a claim consistent with the title’s status as a perennial backlist seller. [2] In the 2022–2024 period the book repeatedly charted on Publishers Weekly’s Religion Fiction lists, including a No. 1 peak on 14 August 2023 and sustained monthly appearances before and after Easter, indicating recurring seasonal demand. [3]

👍 Praise. Endorsements compiled by the publisher—spanning Norman Vincent Peale to sales-training leaders—praise the parable’s simplicity and applicability to everyday selling. [2] Outside publishing, high-profile readers have publicly credited the book with practical influence: The Guardian reported Rory McIlroy “raving” about it during Open week in July 2019. [8] The Washington Post likewise noted that the ethos of Mandino’s scrolls “transformed” Matthew McConaughey when he discovered the book in college. [9]

👎 Criticism. Some critics fault the aphoristic, motivational tone as prone to platitudes: reviewing McConaughey’s memoir, The Washington Post characterized Mandino’s ethos as a “bottomless resource for Successories posters,” using that frame to question the depth of similar self-help maxims. [10]

🌍 Impact & adoption. The book’s visibility endures across popular culture and training contexts: McConaughey’s account of ten months spent reading the scrolls aligns with the text’s practice-first intent, while McIlroy’s 2019 endorsement kept it in the athletic performance conversation. [11][12] Continued reissues from Bantam/PRH and regular appearances on industry bestseller lists show ongoing adoption in retail and reading-group circuits long after first publication. [7][2][3]

Related content & more

YouTube videos

Provided ID could not be validated. Concise animated summary of the 10 Scrolls (10 min) Provided ID could not be validated. Author talk/overview of lessons (27 min)

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References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 "The greatest salesman in the world (1968)". Internet Archive. F. Fell. Retrieved 4 November 2025.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 "The Greatest Salesman in the World". Penguin Random House. Penguin Random House. 6 May 2025. Retrieved 4 November 2025.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 "Publishers Weekly Bestseller Lists — Religion Fiction". Publishers Weekly. Retrieved 4 November 2025.
  4. "The greatest salesman in the world". WorldCat. OCLC. Retrieved 4 November 2025.
  5. "The greatest salesman in the world". WorldCat. OCLC. Retrieved 4 November 2025.
  6. "Og Mandino". Penguin Random House. Penguin Random House. Retrieved 4 November 2025.
  7. 7.0 7.1 "The greatest salesman in the world". WorldCat. OCLC. Retrieved 4 November 2025.
  8. "Rory McIlroy keeps focus on bigger picture before Open homecoming". The Guardian. 17 July 2019. Retrieved 4 November 2025.
  9. Athitakis, Mark (20 October 2020). "Greenlights by Matthew McConaughey book review". The Washington Post. Retrieved 4 November 2025.
  10. Athitakis, Mark (20 October 2020). "Greenlights by Matthew McConaughey book review". The Washington Post. Retrieved 4 November 2025.
  11. Athitakis, Mark (20 October 2020). "Greenlights by Matthew McConaughey book review". The Washington Post. Retrieved 4 November 2025.
  12. "Rory McIlroy keeps focus on bigger picture before Open homecoming". The Guardian. 17 July 2019. Retrieved 4 November 2025.