Sir Thomas More’s Utopia (1516) is a key text for any form of literary mapping as it represents an extremely early example of a literary work that also presents a corresponding map. In the published editions that map is of the island alone, not of the Utopian place located in relation to the realist base world. Rather, More presented the map as part of a meta-structure of documentation designed to blur the boundaries between real world exploration to the New World and his imagined, ideal state. This was so successful that many readers voiced the desire for such a map so that they could go and visit Utopia for themselves. The maps generated here from the graph topologies by comparison do show the relative spaces of the 'real' – 'England' / 'France' / 'Author’s House' – in relation to the imaginary island.