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House of Darkness: House of Light- The True Story, Vol. 1 Paperback – Illustrated, March 8, 2011


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Roger and Carolyn Perron purchased the home of their dreams and eventual nightmares in December of 1970. The Arnold Estate, located just beyond the village of Harrisville, Rhode Island seemed the idyllic setting in which to raise a family. The couple unwittingly moved their five young daughters into the ancient and mysterious farmhouse. Secrets were kept and then revealed within a space shared by mortal and immortal alike. Time suddenly became irrelevant; fractured by spirits making their presence known then dispersing into the ether. The house is a portal to the past and a passage to the future. This is a sacred story of spiritual enlightenment, told some thirty years hence. The family is now somewhat less reticent to divulge a closely-guarded experience. Their odyssey is chronicled by the eldest sibling and is an unabridged account of a supernatural excursion. Ed and Lorraine Warren investigated this haunting in a futile attempt to intervene on their behalf. They consider the Perron family saga to be one of the most compelling and significant of a famously ghost-storied career as paranormal researchers. During a séance gone horribly wrong, they unleashed an unholy hostess; the spirit called Bathsheba . . . a God-forsaken soul. Perceiving herself to be mistress of the house, she did not appreciate the competition. Carolyn had long been under siege; overt threats issued in the form of fire . . . a mother's greatest fear. It transformed the woman in unimaginable ways. After nearly a decade the family left a once beloved home behind though it will never leave them, as each remains haunted by a memory. This tale is an inspiring testament to the resilience of the human spirit on a pathway of discovery: an eternal journey for the living and the dead.
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Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ AuthorHouse; First Edition (March 8, 2011)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 528 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1456747592
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1456747596
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.69 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6 x 1.32 x 9 inches
  • Customer Reviews:

About the author

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Andrea Perron
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My name is Andrea Perron. I am the eldest daughter of Roger & Carolyn Perron. I have four sisters: Nancy, Christine, Cynthia and April. My birthdate: October 10, 1958...the only one of five siblings to be born in Rhode Island. I was just two months old when my parents bought our first home in Willimantic, Connecticut, where all my sisters came into the world.

A burgeoning family required more space so we bought a larger home in Cumberland, R.I. when I was six. Living in a suburb of Providence proved disquieting. After six years my mother decided her girls required a place in the country in which to grow and thrive. In June of 1970 she found a glorious farm, then she and my father moved mountains to buy what was known as the old Arnold Estate; two-hundred acres of land with a big barn and a farmhouse; plenty of space to spread out and explore Nature. It was the perfect place to raise a family, according to the owner, though he failed to disclose a crucial element of the experience he endured as an occupant.

The day we moved in, he told my father: "...leave the lights on at night." A rather cryptic message. Thus began an incredible odyssey; a supernatural excursion through dimensions of time and space as the history of its characters from the ages began to reveal themselves to seven mortals who could not conceive of and never anticipated such events transpiring in our lives. For almost a decade our family lived among the dead. There we came to understand that we are not alone and there is something beyond mortal existence. I graduated from high school in 1976 and attended Chatham College in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Graduating in 1980 with an interdisciplinary degree in Philosophy and English, it was during my senior year when my mother announced the sale of the farm was pending. I was heart broken. In spite of the trials, it was "home" and I loved it. Returning to Rhode Island, we were there only a few weeks before relocating to Georgia; long enough to pack and say goodbye. It was over. Though we abandoned our place in the country, it never left us. Memory is powerful.

I've spent my life since engaging in a variety of endeavors. Georgia did not suit me. After seven years I went home to R.I. Though I have always been a writer, I have likewise explored my own creative abilities. As a professional singer, songwriter, musician and actor, my time has been full of adventures and interesting characters. For more than twenty years I was a cast member with The Theatre Company of Rhode Island, performing on the stage of The Assembly Theater, the historic centerpiece of Harrisville. For the last ten years I lived in R.I. I was employed as a youth counselor at Harmony Hill School in Chepachet and lived in the village of Harmony, in a quaint cottage on Waterman Lake, also known as paradise on a pond. In 2007 I began writing the manuscript which has now evolved into the trilogy "House of Darkness House of Light" and relocated (again) to Georgia to be with my family while embarking on such a major project involving all of them as well. It has proved to be quite an excursion in its own right, spawning some nightmares while exhuming our memories of the dead. Often painful, it has been a healing process as well, as each revisited a past impacting our present, clearly mapping the future of a family. There was no escaping unscathed, though we thought we has successfully done so at the time.

This is a story whose time has come. Many have spoken or written about fragments of the story for decades. Now is the time to tell the whole truth about what happened in a house alive with death as we lived an illuminating decade of life. It is a tale worth telling because it is true. Time has come because we are ready to disclose our secrets and the world is ready to receive them.

Customer reviews

4.2 out of 5 stars
4.2 out of 5
2,431 global ratings
An Awesome Read!
5 Stars
An Awesome Read!
I Have Many Books. I Only Have A Select Few That I Read Over && Over. I Have Even Less Series That I Adore And Read Over And Over That I Will Always Love And Read And They'll Never Get Old. This Series Is So Good I Haven't Put It Down. I Always Watched Videos About These Books And I Knew She Had Written These But I Just Recently Started On Them I'm Not Even Done With Volume One And I Can Tell I've Gotta Buy The Entire Collection So I Got Volumes 1&2 And Next Week I'll Buy #3. I Bought These so I Can Always Go Back To Them And I Can Say From Somebody Who When They Love A Series Read It Over And over I Can Tell These Are That Kind Of Series.Mrs Andrea Perron These Books Are Amazing. Thanks For Your Honesty And Your Beautiful Writing! I Also Lived In A House As A Kid That Wasn't As Active As This But We Experienced Our Own Super Natural Things. As Well As Others Who Stayed There And Or Slept Over Night. It Is A Crazy Thing When You Experience Something Like That And Makes You Wonder And Question Everything.I'm Currently On Book Number 2 And Already Bought Book Number 3. I Respect You All So Much And Love Reading About Your Experiences And Your Happy And Good And Not So Good Times At Your Farm.Thank You For These Books. There Wonderful And I'm Sure I'll Continue To Enjoy Them.
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on April 25, 2016
I saw the film The Conjuring and I wanted to know more about the case and the Warrens. I’ve read two of the Warren's books and I came back to this case because they haven’t written one about it and they hadn’t made any significant mentions of the case that I could easily find elsewhere, so I decided to read Andrea’s first two books. I got what I wanted and more, so I rated it five stars. I got the impression from reading the reviews that even though the Amazon rating system is pretty simple: hated it<------>loved it, it turned into more of a writing style rating system for some reviewers.

What I liked the most about book 1:
This is a rare experience. New England has lots of old houses, some are haunted with spirits, and this book is a privileged peek into what living in a haunted house with an evil spirit was like and how the family of seven were affected by their decade at the farm. Despite all the chaos the spirits created in the Perron’s home, Andrea did a good job of depicted how their life in the countryside was pretty ideal and peaceful. There’s always a sense of balance in the book: for example, the evil Bathsheba, trapping a child in a trunk in contrast with the benevolent spirits at Fran’s house helping to turn the sheet music when Andrea plays the piano. Even Andrea’s passages of deep analysis is balanced with ‘Boo!’ throughout the book. I also liked the occasional philosophical analysis and the Socratic style of questioning which allows the reader to examine his or her preconceived ideas about spirits and the paranormal, and not just vicariously experience these events through the family members. I don’t think some of the other reviewers have considered the benefits of this approach and can consequently fail to get a deeper awareness of what this family’s journey was like. I agree that the enlightenment is in the question, not the answer. It makes perfect sense that unwillingly sharing a house haunted with so many spirits and an evil one like Bathsheba would create more questions than answers.

Before reading this book, I listened to American Sniper by Chris Kyle. He could see a target through his rifle’s scope better than he could see himself because his book was fairly lacking in insight. I don’t think that he really reflected on his experiences to understand the world more deeply. This was the next book I choose to read and I appreciate the academic and philosophical approach she took to make sense of a deceptively idyllic environment that in some ways seems very similar to Fallujah. (By the way, this book was scarier than reading about the Iraq war.)

What I disliked about it:
I did not like how the book affected me. I had been reading it through the night and was on the page about how Bathsheba would stop clocks in the house at 5:15am and just after I read that I looked at the time and it was exactly 5:15am. Very, very creepy. I had to put the book away for a little while. For me, the story affected me the way some people are affected by studying the grisly details of the Holocaust, slavery, or the Apartheid -- you get too close to it and it seems to get too close to you and you need to take a break and be away from it for awhile. I also didn’t feel comfortable with Andrea’s depiction of Bathsheba Sherman in the book, which I will explain below.

What I still don’t understand after seeing the film and reading the first book:
Is Bathsheba a ghost or is she a demon? In the film, Bathsheba possesses Carolyn very rapidly and it takes an exorcism to force her to leave; she is also capable of leaving the area she haunts; she leaves the Perron house in order to attack the Warren’s daughter, so it fits to call her a demon; in contrast, in the first book, Bathsheba seems less systematic, intelligent, and less powerful than a demon. I don’t recall coming across stories of the children having a dramatic encounter with Bathsheba outside of the house or after moving away for college other than a few times when she followed people in a car who were driving away from the farm. Her ambitions are fairly human: to be the respected mistress of the house; above all, to have its dwellers follow her, not Satan; yet her presence is accompanied by a rapid plunge in temperature (psychic cold) and a foul stench. I thought the spirit of a person who was once alive cannot become a demon, as a demon is a fallen angel who was never alive on Earth to begin with. They’re different types of entities even if they are playing for the same team. I read the book hoping that there would be a clear distinction, but I realize that in real life such distinctions might be blurred or unknowable.

What should have been clearer in the first book:
After reading 500 pages, I felt that there was some important information that was omitted, or somehow not emphasized as much as it needed to be. It could be that the writing style did lead to things getting overshadowed by the philosophical musings, descriptive sentences and the lengthy passages about all the feelings involved, and so forth, but in any case I felt that these things should have been clearer:

1. If Bathsheba were a living person, then by the end of the first book she would be serving hard time in prison for multiple attempts at murder. She could also be charged with assault with a deadly weapon, arson, damage and theft of property, creating mental and emotional distress, being a creepy groper, and so on and so on and so on. Whatever she really is -- and even if she does have feelings of genuine ghostly love for Roger and some of his kids -- her behavior is very criminal compared to the other spirits, and she kept the family, Carolyn especially, living in real and present danger for nearly 10 years.
2. It isn’t very clear what Bathsheba means to Andrea. Why doesn’t Andrea pass harsher judgement on her after she beat and nearly murdered her mother? In the first part of the book, before ever even seeing the house, Andrea broke a neighborhood boy’s nose after he murdered her dog. (Coincidentally, the dog was also named Bathsheba and as another reviewer mentioned this strange coincidence is not explained or explored.) By the end of the first book, I got the impression that Andrea is a little attached to Bathsheba, the witch. One of the spirits in the house, evidently a very creepy one, caught Andrea's boyfriend cheating on her with one of her sisters and scared him away from the farm and the family. The book says he eventually died young of a drug overdose. After the incident with Andrea’s (ex)boyfriend, there is an account of the first time Bathsheba manifested in solid form in front of Roger. Andrea takes on a more critical tone towards Roger for being rude to her and speaking to her without the decorum and deference that Andrea seems to feel Bathsheba is entitled to in "her house". I don’t know if these events happened in chronological order, or if they were just written in chronological order, but it seems the writer has misplaced sympathy for the devil. The real life Bathsheba Sherman was formally tried for murdering an infant and found guilty in the court of public opinion. She was accused of abusing her household staff. She was regarded as a witch in a time before Wicca and 'witchcraft-lite' occult practices. She may not even be resting under her headstone because the townspeople didn't want her buried in consecrated ground. She didn't make better choices after death.
3. To what extent did relationships between the spirits and the living inhabitants manifest? It’s clear there was mutual dislike between Carolyn and Bathsheba, but I’ve learned elsewhere online that there was a relationship between April and the spirit of the young boy she saw right after moving in, and that Bathsheba lusted after Roger. She broke items in the house knowing he would take them into the cellar to repair them, where he felt icy fingers on his back on more than one occasion. I’m looking forward to reading the second book and am hoping that some of these lingering questions will be answered.

This is my first book review on Amazon. I didn’t like all the negativity of the reviewers. It did impact how I read the book and it’s a very rare type of book to read, so I felt the need to discuss and analyze more than average. I wish some people would remember that others are reading these reviews to get more information about the book & decide if they will buy it and read it, too. This is more of a memoir -- not a novel, told in vignettes. A novel is a work of fiction and it DOES NOT need to follow a strictly linear timeline, as 100 Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez shows. They lived in a house with timeless spirits who sometimes appear young or old, and I think the time jumping is kind of appropriate. It was almost like flipping through a family photo album. As for the academic writing style with no editor -- I think it adds to the authenticity and even a good editor could have done more harm than good with the story. Andrea's the eldest and this fits the birth order psychology theory that the eldest is the most academically driven and the most likely to become a professor.

If a revised, abridged version is ever published, it might be helpful to separate the telling of the story from the deeper philosophical analysis; perhaps by concisely telling the facts and feelings of the story in the first part of the chapter, and then have the second part of the chapter be about analyzing what those events could mean. Separating the content gives the those readers who need the graded reader version a sense of control over how much enlightenment and academia they’re exposed to while reading the story, so maybe, maybe, maybe they could come back to the more insightful parts at a later time, and it'd keep those readers who need to explore this topic more deeply happy as well.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 18, 2024
Andrea Oerron tells her story of how she grew up in the conjuring house, encountering spirits, and witnessing the paranormal. This series of books kept me on my toes and it also speaks of belief and hope in something do beautiful...love! I can't believe she was so open and honest in her telling of her own personal experience anls well as that of her sisters, mother, and father. What a great read and a beautiful story.
Reviewed in the United States on March 15, 2021
Written by the eldest Perron daughter, this book is a firsthand account of the family’s experiences. If you’re looking for a ‘scary’ book, this isn’t it... it is a retelling of the experiences of family and friends living in a spirit-filled farmhouse in rural Rhode Island during the 70’s. The fact that it’s written by a person who lived through it really gives credence to the story and makes it all the more convincing for the reader.

The most interesting aspect (to me) is the author’s disagreement with the so-called paranormal ‘experts’ on the nature/intention of the spirits that inhabit the house, as well as what worked best to handle them. Very little mention of the Warren’s involvement in this volume, I expect this will be forthcoming in volume 2.

My one criticism is that the narrative meanders quite a bit. It is not a linear timeline and therefore can be a bit confusing for the reader. There is also quite a bit of philosophical discourse about the nature of spirit, the soul, time, and consciousness. I found that to be intriguing in light of the author’s own experiences, and it really made me think about my own beliefs. So interesting!
6 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on October 21, 2022
Truly enjoyed this book I was mixed up on it because of some reviews on whether to get it and I’m so glad I did. I must admit it does repeat a lot and tends to linger and jump around. But you just have to put yourself in the fact that she is remembering everything that happened just as we try to remember things over a course of years we don’t remember everything accordingly and in order. It’s random and all over the place! She also tends to linger into poetry which I find beautiful, especially because of what the poetry is about. The repetition I didn’t mind cause it just for me was reminder of that certain thing, I just saw it as whatever was repeated made such an impact in their lives that it had to be mentioned again.

I’m currently on the second book and it’s even better!

Top reviews from other countries

Jules
5.0 out of 5 stars Finally!
Reviewed in Canada on January 26, 2024
The truth about what happened to the Perron family is so different than what the Warrens said. I’m so glad that Andrea wrote these books
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Adam B. Farlow
5.0 out of 5 stars this is an amazing book and i have loved (most) every page!
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on November 20, 2023
I have been a horror fan and paranormal believer for many years now, the minuet I watched "the Conjuring" movie I was immediately pulled in. when I learnt that this movie was in fact based on a true story and place( as most say they are but are very loosely based om reality) i was on amazon in two seconds.

I think that its safe to say that this book cemented my belief in the paranormal and has completely altered the way I look at life!! when the book arrived I was shocked by the sheer length of at, it took a year to read in full, but I soon realized that its got such a amazing story behind it and has been a real page turner. at times it can be a bit slow but it is mainly a great read! I'm looking forward to reading the next two.
Thank you very much Andrea!
great read!
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Augusto Sales
4.0 out of 5 stars Pena que não foi publicado no Brasil
Reviewed in Brazil on January 13, 2021
O livro é bem escrito, mas mal editado. Mesmo assim, a história é MUITO interessante. Andrea conseguiu me fazer viajar no tempo até o início dos anos setenta. E me importei bastante com aquela família enquanto lia o livro. Vou passar pro segundo volume em seguida
7 people found this helpful
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BLB
5.0 out of 5 stars Very well written. A riveting read!
Reviewed in Germany on April 25, 2022
If true accounts of stories are written with such fluidity, no one will want to read fiction! A thrilling book to read.
María del C.
1.0 out of 5 stars Demasiadas descripciones
Reviewed in Spain on September 12, 2021
Demasiadas descripciones que no aportan nada.