4 Answers2026-07-08 01:10:02
Finally got around to cataloging my whole shelf of these things. The core saga everybody talks about is the original 'Warriors' series, which started with 'Into the Wild'. That's 'The Prophecies Begin'. After that, it's 'The New Prophecy' (beginning with 'Midnight'), 'Power of Three' ('The Sight'), 'Omen of the Stars' ('The Fourth Apprentice'), and 'A Vision of Shadows' ('The Apprentice's Quest'). The latest main arc is 'The Broken Code' ('Lost Stars'), followed by the currently publishing 'A Starless Clan' beginning with 'River'.
But that's just the spine of it. You've got the 'Dawn of the Clans' prequel series way before everything, which is actually a fantastic entry point. Then there are the 'Super Editions' focusing on single cats, like 'Firestar's Quest' or 'Bluestar's Prophecy', which slot in at specific times. Plus a ton of novella collections and 'Field Guides'. It's a whole ecosystem. The official website has a timeline, but honestly, half my reading order came from piecing together forum posts from ten years ago.
5 Answers2025-08-31 03:25:13
There are 48 core novels in the main 'Warriors' saga — that comes from eight epic arcs with six books each. The arcs start with 'The Prophecies Begin' and move through 'The New Prophecy', 'Power of Three', 'Omen of the Stars', 'Dawn of the Clans', 'A Vision of Shadows', 'The Broken Code', and 'A Starless Clan'. If you’re counting just the numbered arc books, that’s the clear, tidy total.
Beyond those, the world is much bigger: there are dozens of Super Editions, novellas, field guides, and a whole line of manga. Super Editions like 'Bluestar's Prophecy' or 'Ravenpaw's Farewell' give long standalone stories, while the novellas fill in side characters and moments. Add in guides such as 'Secrets of the Clans' and the various manga miniseries, and you’re looking at many more titles — easily pushing the complete Warriors reading list well past 70 books. I love recommending people start with a single arc and then binge the rest, because once you meet these cats, it’s hard to stop.
4 Answers2026-07-08 01:43:58
The Warriors series situation is a genuine maze at this point. Asking for 'how many books' feels like asking how many stars are visible—it depends where you stand and what you count. If we're talking the mainline 'arcs,' it's several distinct sets: the original 'The Prophecies Begin' (6 books), 'The New Prophecy' (6), 'Power of Three' (6), 'Oathbreaker'—wait, 'Omen of the Stars' (6), then 'A Vision of Shadows' (6), 'The Broken Code' (6), and the currently ongoing 'A Starless Clan.' So that's seven completed multi-book arcs, plus the new one.
But then the 'Super Editions,' which are hefty single-character deep dives, add another... fifteen or sixteen? I lost track after 'Leopardstar's Honor.' Don't forget the 'Novellas' (those three-book packs like 'Tales from the Clans'), the 'Field Guides,' and the mangas. A straight number is almost meaningless; you need a map. For a new reader, just the first arc is a solid commitment. The total count easily brushes past 90 individual titles if you include every single publication. It’s a sprawling universe, and counting them feels like herding cats.
5 Answers2025-08-31 15:19:39
There's something magical about handing someone their first Warriors book, so I'd tell them to start simple: read the original arc first. Begin with 'Into the Wild' and follow that first six-book set through to 'The Darkest Hour' before jumping around. That builds core characters and loyalties in the way the authors intended, and it preserves the emotional punches that hit later arcs.
After the original arc, I like following publication order: 'The New Prophecy', then 'Power of Three', then 'Omen of the Stars'. Once you've finished those, slot in 'Dawn of the Clans' if you want the prequel backstory; I usually read that after 'Omen' so the origin pieces feel like rewarding explanations. Sprinkle in the super editions like 'Firestar's Quest' or 'Bluestar's Prophecy' after the arcs that reference their events, and treat the novellas and manga as tasty side-trips whenever you want more depth without losing the main storyline. Reading that way kept me hooked from book one and meant every reveal landed hard.
4 Answers2026-07-08 02:56:24
Honestly, a lot of people will tell you to start with the very first book, 'Into the Wild'. And that's fine, it's the classic starting point. But I tried that with a friend last year and she just couldn't get into it—the writing felt a little too simple for her, she's used to more complex stuff. I ended up telling her to jump ahead and begin with the second arc, 'The New Prophecy', specifically 'Midnight'. The stakes feel higher right away, the journey concept is immediately gripping, and the characters are a bit more developed. She blasted through that whole series and then went back and read the original 'Warriors' arc with way more appreciation because she was already invested in the world.
Starting with 'The New Prophecy' skips the sometimes slower clan-establishing stuff and gets you straight into a big, dangerous mystery. You might miss some references, but nothing crucial, and the books do a decent job filling you in. It's like a backdoor into the fandom that works surprisingly well.
4 Answers2026-07-08 09:55:50
I keep a browser tab open just for checking the 'Warriors' reading order because honestly, it’s a maze after the first arc. I got burned once trying to read 'The New Prophecy' before finishing the original six books and stumbled into spoilers about a major character's fate from a super edition. The official HarperCollins site has a decent list, but it’s too linear and misses how the novellas and manga tie in chronologically. Fan-run wikis are a lifesaver, particularly the one with the timeline that interweaves the main arcs, side books, and even the field guides. I’d avoid random Pinterest graphics though—they look pretty but I’ve seen them list 'SkyClan’s Destiny' in the wrong spot.
My method now is to pick an era, like the Dawn of the Clans prequels, and follow a dedicated fan’s reading order from a forum like Wands and Worlds. Those readers debate placement for months, so their lists feel battle-tested. Just don’t get lost in the 'should I read by publication or chronology' rabbit hole on your first time through. Publication order keeps the reveals intact, even if the timeline jumps around.
5 Answers2025-08-31 08:28:09
Whenever friends ask me where to start with Erin Hunter, I hand them 'Into the Wild' without hesitation.
It’s the first book in the original 'Warriors' arc and it introduces you to the world, the clans, and Rusty (who becomes Firepaw) in a way that’s immediate and easy to follow. The pacing is friendly for new readers: short chapters, clear stakes, and just enough mystery to make you keep turning pages. It also sets up the core themes—loyalty, identity, and difficult choices—without dumping too much lore at once. If you're worried about emotional stuff, go in knowing the series isn't shy about loss, but that's also what makes the characters feel alive. For a gentler intro, some people start with the graphic novel adaptation of 'Into the Wild' to get a visual feel, but if you want the full experience and the vibe that hooked so many of us, start with 'Into the Wild'. I still get a little rush flipping those opening pages.
3 Answers2025-08-31 00:35:19
I still get a little giddy thinking about listening to battle scenes while I wash dishes, so this one’s an easy yes from me: there are official audiobooks for the 'Warriors' series. Most of the main arcs — starting with 'Into the Wild' and continuing through the original series and later arcs — have been released in audiobook form. They come in a few different formats: digital downloads on stores like Audible and Apple Books, sometimes CDs (more common with older releases or special editions), and through library services such as Libby/OverDrive and Hoopla when your library carries them.
The production side can be a bit of a patchwork: different regions or reprints sometimes use different narrators, and not every single novella or mini-release was immediately produced as an audio edition. That said, the core novels and many of the super editions and short-story collections do have official audio versions. Most of the full-length books are unabridged, but if you care deeply whether a specific title is abridged or not, it’s worth checking the publisher or the sample to be certain.
Quick tips from my experience: sample the narrator before you commit (those voices can make or break immersion), check your library app first if you want to avoid buying, and keep an eye on the publisher pages — HarperCollins often lists audiobook credits and release info. If you’re collecting them, you might see different narrator line-ups across arcs, which is kind of neat in its own way. Happy listening — there’s something wild about hearing those clans come alive in your headphones.