Novels with a map (Which is printed in the book itself, not just referred to):
With Kitchen Privileges (Louise Andrews Kent)
A Feast For Crows (George R.R. Martin)
Lord of the Rings (J.R.R. Tolkien)
Sarum (Edward Rutherfurd)
Bored of the Rings (National Lampoon)
Treasure Island (Robert Louis Stevenson)
Hawaii (James Michener)
Watership Down (Richard Adams)
Capt. Kidd’s Cat (Robert Lawson)
10, Far from the Madding Crowd (Thomas Hardy).
Chronicles of Narnia (C.S. Lewis)
And a shout out to Pauline Baynes who illustrated the maps of Narnia and Middle Earth, from a New Yorker article:
" J. R. R. Tolkien commissioned Pauline Baynes, who learned mapmaking in the Ministry of Defence during the Second World War, to create maps of his fictional land, Middle Earth: her delicate elven script proclaimed place names, tree-dotted forests and sharp-peaked mountain ranges giving depth to the scenery, and a selection of inserts illustrated some of the architecture, characters, and creatures.
Writing to his publisher in 1949, after receiving some of Baynes’s drawings for “Farmer Giles of Ham,” Tolkien expressed his satisfaction with her art: “They are more than illustrations, they are a collateral theme. I showed them to my friends whose polite comment was that they reduced my text to a commentary on the drawings.” The same could be said for her map of Middle Earth, which influenced the way many readers visualized the imaginary world. Tolkien was so satisfied with her work that he introduced her to his friend C. S. Lewis, for whom she mapped Narnia."
Novels with a map (Which is printed in the book itself, not just referred to):
With Kitchen Privileges (Louise Andrews Kent)
A Feast For Crows (George R.R. Martin)
Lord of the Rings (J.R.R. Tolkien)
Sarum (Edward Rutherfurd)
Bored of the Rings (National Lampoon)
Treasure Island (Robert Louis Stevenson)
Hawaii (James Michener)
Watership Down (Richard Adams)
Capt. Kidd’s Cat (Robert Lawson)
Far from the Madding Crowd (Thomas Hardy)
Chronicles of Narnia (C.S. Lewis)
Tik-Tok of Oz (L. Frank Baum)
This was the first Oz book which was published with Baum’s map of Oz. It (or an updated map) was subsequently included in republications of the earlier books.