Walter Taminang—writing under the name Warreh—is a physician, public health leader, and author whose work sits at the intersection of lived experience, institutional systems, and philosophical inquiry.
Trained in clinical medicine and public health, his professional life has unfolded across hospitals, humanitarian programs, and development institutions in Africa and the United States. Over the years, he has worked within complex systems designed to serve human wellbeing—healthcare delivery, humanitarian response, global development—and has seen firsthand both their promise and their limits. These experiences form the quiet backbone of his writing.
Warreh does not write from abstraction or ideology. He writes from proximity: to institutions, to responsibility, to moral trade-offs, and to the inner lives of people navigating systems larger than themselves. His work interrogates questions of agency, freedom, identity, and meaning—not as motivational slogans, but as lived tensions that shape real decisions and real lives.
A lifelong reader before becoming a deliberate author, his intellectual formation spans literature, philosophy, biography, social critique, and reflective nonfiction. Reading was never a steppingstone toward writing; it was a way of understanding the world. Writing emerged later, not from urgency, but from readiness—when experience, reflection, and language finally aligned.
Through Warreh Books, he is building a coherent body of work concerned with authorship: what it means to remain internally free while operating within demanding systems; how individuals reclaim clarity without withdrawing from responsibility; and how a thoughtful life can be lived with dignity even when structures falter.
His books are written for readers who are not looking for shortcuts or certainty, but for orientation—those willing to think carefully, live deliberately, and take responsibility for the shape of their own lives.
Warreh currently lives and works in the United States.

