Welcome to the GEOGRAPHY section of Warrior's Wish - the largest section on the internet dedicated to the territories, maps and landmarks appearing in the Warriors, The New Prophecy and The Power Of Three series. This section contains maps and background information on the inspiration behind the territories, as well as in-depth descriptions and indexes pertaining to the landscapes, with details from the books as well as Secrets of the Clans.

The Forest

The forest territories appeared in books 1 - 6 of Warriors, books 1 - 3 of The New Prophecy and Firestar's Quest. They were originally inspired by the conversation area of NEW FOREST, England, which Ww has an article here which explains similarities to the forest territories. Click on the map below to explore the territories.

CAT VIEW MAP this map comes before the "twoleg view" map and is a territory map of the area of the four Clans and landmarks with the names as they are known to the clan cats.

TWOLEG VIEW MAP this forest map accompanies the "cat view" map inside the Warriors books, and shows a less-artistic view of the forest from the view of a twoleg, with the names of the landmarks as they are known to humans.

RUSSIAN MAP this map of the original territories was gotten from Kate Cary's website, and is presumably from the inside of one of the Russian Warriors translations. The map is less detailed and more of an illustration then anything else, but some similarities between the two maps exist.





The Lake

The new territories, the "Lake" territories exist in books 4 - 6 of The New Prophecy and the books of The Power Of Three. It is a completely fictional landscape situated around a giant lake. Click on the map to explore the territories.

CAT VIEW MAP this lake map comes before the "twoleg view" map and is of the territories around the lake of the four Clans and landmarks with the names as they are known to the clan cats.

TWOLEG VIEW MAP this lake map accompanies the "cat view" map inside the Warriors books, and shows a less-artistic view of the forest from the view of a twoleg, with the names of the landmarks as they are known to humans.