I just wanted to point out that "erewhon" is NOT "backwards for nowhere", erewhon is backwards for nohwere. Eh? So I'm anal when it comes to language.

However, Erewhon is an anagram of nowhere; just one of the numerous language games Butler plays in the work. Nowhere in Latin is utopia, which is why Sir Thomas Moore chose the word for the title of his famous work, which has become a part of the lexicon for an ideal society (or nowhere).

Obviously Mr. Butler wished to associate his satire with the utopian literary tradition.