The Life Power and How to Use It by Elizabeth Towne is a self-help book that explores the concept of personal power and provides practical guidance on how to harness and utilize it effectively. Towne offers readers a transformative path to living a more empowered and fulfilling life. The book delves into the fundamental principles of personal power, emphasizing the importance of understanding one's own capabilities and inner potential. Towne guides readers through exercises and techniques to tap into their inherent life force and channel it toward achieving their goals and desires. Readers will be gone through the role of the mind in harnessing personal power. Towne discusses the power of thought and belief, emphasizing the influence of positive thinking and visualization in shaping one's reality. Furthermore, the author delves into the concept of intuition and its connection to personal power. She teaches readers how to listen to their inner wisdom, trust their instincts, and make empowered decisions aligned with their true desires.
Elizabeth Jones Towne was an important writer, editor, and publisher in the New Thought and self-help groups. She lived from May 11, 1865, to June 1, 1960. John Halsey Jones's daughter, Elizabeth Jones, was born in Oregon. She got married for the first time when she was 14 years old. Catherine and Chester were their children. In 1900, they split up. She got married to William E. Towne that same year and moved to Holyoke, Massachusetts. Towne started and ran Nautilus Magazine, a New Thought Movement magazine that ran from 1898 to 1953, when she shut it down because she was getting too old (she was 88 at the time). She also ran the Elizabeth Towne Company, which published many New Thought, metaphysical, self-help, and self-improvement books by herself and other authors like William Walker Atkinson, Kate Atkinson Boehme, Paul Ellsworth, Orison Swett Marden, Edwin Markham, Clara Chamberlain McLean, Helen Rhodes-Wallace, William Towne, and Wallace Wattles.