The Edward Ware Thrillers at War Series visits many locales. In one novel you find yourself in Pittsburgh, Dora’s hometown. In another you are visiting Santa Fe, New Mexico where spies proliferated during World War 2 because of nearby Los Alamos. You can even find yourself on the North Atlantic where Dora sailed in the Lusitania in 1915 in the first book of the series. You could be eating in Paris at the Ritz as you are in Hitler’s Spy. You could be sailing down a canal in a gondola as Edward does in Map Plot. Or you could be visiting Hitler in Nuremberg or at the Berghof as Edward and Dora do repeatedly in Captive at the Berghof. But no setting occurs more frequently than London. It is Edward’s hometown. Colonel Sir Edward Ware and Lady Ware are always visiting Churchill and meeting him at Morpeth Mansions or at Parliament. They are always stopping at the Savoy Hotel or eating a bite at the Olde Cheshire Cheese. They might even be hiding those Lawrence maps near the Rosetta Stone at the British Museum. They might even attend a ball or two at the German Embassy and get into lots and lots of trouble. But what would a thriller be without trouble? Pick up any of the novels in the series, and you are likely to visit London at least once.