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A Lifetime of Secrets: A PostSecret Book

A Lifetime of Secrets: A PostSecret Book

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Author: Frank Warren
Publisher: William Morrow
Category: Book

List Price: $27.95
Buy New: $15.61
You Save: $12.34 (44%)



New (36) Used (17) Collectible (1) from $14.50

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 72 reviews
Sales Rank: 2449

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 288
Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.4
Dimensions (in): 10.4 x 8.2 x 1.1

ISBN: 0061238600
Dewey Decimal Number: 155.6
EAN: 9780061238604
ASIN: 0061238600

Publication Date: October 1, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Absolutely Brand New & In Stock. 100% 30-Day Money Back. Direct from our warehouse. Ships by USPS. 1+ million customers served-In business since 1986. Happy Customers is Our #1 Goal. Toll Free Support

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Editorial Reviews:

Book Description
The award-winning PostSecret project's most profound and stunning postcards to date

For the past three years Frank Warren has invited people of all backgrounds and nationalities to send him creatively decorated postcards bearing secrets they have never before revealed. He has shared these PostSecrets on his award-winning blog, www.PostSecret.com, in an internationally traveling art exhibit, and in three electrifying books: the bestselling PostSecret, My Secret, and The Secret Lives of Men and Women.

Now, in his most extraordinary book yet, Warren again delves into our collective confessions, presenting a never-before-seen selection of provocative and moving PostSecrets. A Lifetime of Secrets lays bare our private fears, hopes, regrets, and desires, from people as young as eight and as old as eighty. From painful admissions of infidelity to breathtaking revelations and endearing sentiments, Warren's latest collection will shock and move readers of every age, revealing secrets that have haunted their creators for a lifetime.

Six PostSecrets from A Lifetime of Secrets

Here are six of the PostSecrets included in A Lifetime of Secrets, and never before seen online. Click on each image to see a larger version.

Frank Warren's Introduction to A Lifetime of Secrets

When I told my father I was collecting secrets from strangers for an art project, he didn't know what to think. I tried to explain how the thousands of secrets that had been mailed to me were more than mere confessions. They could be beautiful, funny, sorrowful, inspiring.

"But, Frank," he asked, "why are you soliciting secrets from strangers, and why would anyone tell you a real secret?"

I invited my father to fly out for a PostSecret art exhibit in Washington, D.C., where hundreds of the postcards were on display. More than 15,000 people came to see the secrets, and my father was there, day after day, to hear many of their transformative stories. Some people told me they recognized a hidden part of themselves on a stranger's postcard. Others shared personal experiences of how talking about a painful secret had helped heal a lifelong relationship.

The exhibit came to an end and I took my father back to the airport to catch a red-eye flight home. During our drive we passed through a long dark stretch of highway when my father broke the silence by asking me, "Do you want to know my secret?" He bravely recounted a traumatic childhood experience. When he finished, we had a true talk that gave me a richer understanding of my father and recast our relationship.

• • •

For A Lifetime of Secrets, the fourth PostSecret book, I've selected postcards that show how secrets can reveal a momentary impulse or haunt us for decades and arranged them by age to follow the common journey we all take through childhood, adolescence, adulthood, maturity. Stretched over a full lifespan, the secrets expose the meaningful ways we change over time, and the surprising ways we don't.

The postcards narrate childhood stories that have never been spoken; they voice the guarded confessions of our parents and grandparents. They confirm that our rich interior lives are not defined by how old we are, and that with aging comes not only loss but also the possibility of grace and wisdom.

The following two secrets arrived in my mailbox the same week. The postmarks on each card were different, but when I posted them together on the PostSecret website (www.postsecret.com) they seemed as though they could have been written by the same person at two different points in her life.

I am a junior in high school. I have good friends and a loving family. I am smart. I am a good athlete and musician. But I would trade all that in if it meant I would be beautiful.
I spent my high school years believing I was UGLY. I just went through a photo album that had pictures of me over the last 20 years. Turns out I was/am kind of cute. No more wasting time on thinking otherwise.
• • •

When I give PostSecret presentations at college campuses, my hope is that people I have never met will be inspired to change their lives through the secrets and stories being shared. Not long ago, at one of my talks, it was my life that was changed, and the secret that inspired me came from a stranger in the front row.

I began my presentation by handing out blank postcards to everyone in the auditorium. I invited each person to anonymously write down a secret on a card and then pass it on. For the next hour, the postcards circulated and were read silently multiple times. At the end of my talk, I asked if anyone would like to stand and read the secret they were holding at that moment. A man in the front row stood up and haltingly read:

I wish I could apologize to my younger brother for the way I treated him growing up.
He sat down and exchanged a long look with the young man next to him. After more volunteers read aloud some of the other secrets that had been passed around, I collected all the cards. The man in the front row handed me the postcard he had read from, and the two men walked out together.

His postcard was blank.

I have witnessed many times how the courage of sharing a secret can be contagious. When I realized that the man had been pretending to read someone else's secret and that the person he had left with was likely his brother, I was inspired.

Growing up, I was not an ideal older brother. As an adult, I have wished for an opportunity to apologize for some of my actions but did not want to open old wounds. I have not shared this secret with my brother . . . until now.

--Frank Warren




Customer Reviews:   Read 67 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars A Lifetime of Secrets:A PostSecret Book   August 4, 2008
This PostSecret collection contains secrets from anonymous contributors of all ages. They are entertaining, moving, and inspirational and some really tug at the heartstrings. If you haven't read a PostSecret book I would read this one first; it's the best in my opinion.


1 out of 5 stars Someone's getting rich easy   July 7, 2008
 0 out of 5 found this review helpful

After the high rating for this book I was expecting much more. It's the most depressing book I have ever read, and incredibly boring at the same time. It does worry me that there are so many people around us who are this self absorbed and just S A D. Total waste of money, I think, but the "author" is getting rich I'm sure.


5 out of 5 stars Lifetime of Secrets   June 30, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

This book is delightful and moving. I love the artwork of the postcards and will go back again and again to just browse through them. The personal messages on each card are beautiful - some tragic and some funny but all very human. After I read this book I felt that we are not alone with our problems and struggles. We all have things that make us feel sad or ashamed.


5 out of 5 stars inspiring   June 19, 2008
I've been reading the Post Secret website for well over a year, but the title of this one is what made me decide to purchase it. The book itself was inspiring in that the secrets were so personal, heart-wrenching in some cases. They inspired me to look at my life differently, to be more appreciative for what I have. It also inspired me to send in my own secret.


5 out of 5 stars Confessions and secrets through life...   May 25, 2008
OK... I've now gone through all the PostSecret books at our library with the completion of A Lifetime of Secrets: A PostSecret Book by Frank Warren. As you might be able to tell, there's a bit of a theme on this one. Warren has created a compilation of his PostSecret items ranging from submissions from the very young to the quite-a-bit older. It goes to show that secrets and regrets cut across our entire lifetime, and age doesn't necessarily make them any less or more painful or funny.

The book starts out with secrets that many of us have had or experienced at some time in our adolesence... "I love him. He loves her."; "Dad, I can do anything... as long as your working by me."; "I wonder if my dad ever thinks 'I'm home' when he pulls in the driveway to get me here at my moms."; "I wasted my childhood trying to be grown-up. Now I'm a teenager and it sucks." Secrets drift through the middle years... (Over a drawing of a singer on stage) "When you said I wasn't good enough to be your girlfriend, I used it as my inspiration. Congratulations @sshole, you're famous."; (over a picture of a female archeologist) "I hope that someday he'll bury an engagement ring in the dirt for me to find!"; "Just because I try not to talk about it... does not mean I'm over it, that I feel better, or that I'm ever going to be okay. I just don't want to be a burden."; "I wish I could be someone's hero." As the book winds down, you hear the voice of old age opening up their soul... "Today is my 64th birthday. No one but me knows how lucky I am and how content and happy I feel!"; "I'm 52, male, single and childless. I've played my part in four abortions and a miscarriage. All I ever wanted was a family."; "I will die alone and happy."

About halfway through this book, I started thinking... what if one of these secrets had been written by someone about me? It makes you slow down just a bit when you wonder if you've been responsible for someone's pain, if you've injured someone without thinking, or if you've been the secret longing of someone who never had enough courage to speak up. That whole mindset added yet another layer of feeling over the things I read. I'm sorry to have finished the books, as I had quite the emotional impact from them. And I find that getting in touch with feelings like that is all too uncommon in my life.




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