Since children's literature is intended for children, the emphasis is on providing a space where children can easily imagine. For this reason, authors often create the world in their works using their immediate environment as a model. The setting of a story often reflects the author's cultural background and living environment. Studying this will help to elucidate the cultural and social context in which the work is based. The aim of this study is to clarify the geospatial configurations related to the settings in each story of the "The borrowers" series. The relationship between the geographic spaces in "The borrowers" series and the real-life model locations is examined, along with the author Mary Norton's impressions of her childhood home, or her landscape of the heart. The geospatial context of the stories was found to be related to her original landscape.