For over five decades, Ed and Lorraine Warren—the Catholic Church’s most recognized lay demonologist and a clairvoyant gifted with extraordinary sensitivity—ventured into places where no one else dared to haunted homes, silent convents, hotels hiding secrets, and objects scarred by human despair.
The Warren Files brings together 27 of the most chilling and thoroughly documented cases from their personal from the infamous Annabelle doll and the tragedy of Amityville, to lesser-known but equally unsettling accounts like The Carlyle Hotel Mirror, The Werewolf of London, and The Lament Box. Each story is grounded in field notes, witness interviews, and firsthand testimonies of those who faced the unexplainable.
This book does not seek to persuade skeptics or embellish what is already terrifying. It is a faithful journey into the Warrens’ a couple who fought the unseen with faith, discipline, and an unshakable conviction that evil exists—and waits patiently.
Inside these pages you will
Iconic cases that inspired films such as The Conjuring and Annabelle.
Unpublished files never before revealed to the general public.
Cursed objects and haunted places, many housed in the Warrens’ Occult Museum.
A reminder that the most frightening thing is not always the ghost—but the truths we refuse to face.
👉 The Warren Files is more than a horror it is a documentary testament to an invisible war between good and evil.
A difficult read, for some reason this book isn't written properly and a lot of it doesn't make sense due to this, if you read anything on the Warren's don't read anything by this author as it's a waste of time.
Ignoring all of the strange pronoun problems.. It was a good book, filled with lots of interesting cases. However it does seem to me that some of the accounts differ from the cases that I’ve read more in depth from other books (which, oddly, are written with the help of the Warrens). Most of the chapters appear to simply be a synopsis of each story, especially the one about the Conjuring house. The Warrens account (and the movie) just seem very different from the accounts written by Andrea Perron in House Of Darkness House Of Light. I really enjoyed a lot of the later chapters which focused more on haunted objects as opposed to demonic possessions; it was a nice change. Overall I’m glad I read it, I just wish it was properly edited!
I desperately wanted to enjoy this. I got as far as 23% and gave up, simply because of the errors in the print. I got so frustrated! This would be a really interesting read, but is in desperate need of an edit! Poor editing leads to having to re-read sentences to make sense of the sentence. In a lot of the errors, it's "she" becomes "he". I would read this again if the editing was corrected!
Was interesting to read about the different cases, but I feel like this book was either not edited or if it was it was badly edited- there were errors with the pronouns in the book (randomly changing from he to she or vice versa when talking about the same character) which didn’t make it impossible to read but kinda annoying at times. Was a cool book to read for spooky season though!
My only issue was the author sometimes used male pronouns when referring to Lorraine Warren. It made it difficult to tell if we were talking about her or her husband Ed.