It was created by the author Thomas Hardy and the whole of his novel The Return of the Native takes place there. In the preface to the novel, he describes what the location means to him: It is pleasant to dream that some spot in the extensive tract whose south-western quarter is here described may be the heath of that traditionary King of Wessex - Lear. Egdon Heath also features in The Mayor of Casterbridge and the short story "The Withered Arm" (1888). Millgate suggests the moors of "Wuthering Heights" as a close analogy ("Thomas Hardy: His Career as a Novelist", 1971, p. 131).
Hence Egdon Heath is another example (powerfully used in Hardy) of the landscape reflecting the mood and culture of people. In the novel, he says:
The description of the heath did not sit well with many contemporary critics, who found it exaggerated. Yet Hardy's intention was to treat the heath in an anthropomorphic way, not making it merely reflect the characters' moods but act as a protagonist to them.
Hardy's relationship with the landscape has been examined at length by critics, and Egdon Heath is one of the most frequently cited and best known.
In 1927 the composer Gustav Holst wrote a tone poem for orchestra entitled Egdon Heath, explicitly in homage to Hardy. He considered the restrained but brooding piece to be one of his best works.
In Evelyn Waugh's Decline and Fall, "Egdon Heath" is the location of a prison.