All These Things Added is James Allen's spiritual self-help classic on inner transformation, right conduct, and the search for the true kingdom within. Written in Allen's characteristically clear and meditative style, the book teaches that peace, abundance, wisdom, and freedom are not won through restless striving alone, but through the ordering of thought, desire, action, and character around higher principles.
First published in 1903, the book is divided into two parts: "Entering the Kingdom" and "The Heavenly Life." Allen moves from the soul's deep need and the law of love to stillness, simplicity, wisdom, meekness, righteousness, perfect love, and perfect freedom. Though written from a Christian-influenced spiritual perspective, the book also belongs to the broader tradition of New Thought and classic personal-development literature, where inward mastery becomes the foundation for outward change.
Readers interested in classic self-help, New Thought, spiritual growth, Christian-influenced wisdom literature, moral discipline, and the inner life will find All These Things Added a compact but substantial work. It is less a manual for quick success than a guide to becoming the kind of person for whom peace, strength, and right action can become natural.