Eleanor Catton has helped bring the history of Hokitika into the spotlight with her novel, The Luminaries. Photo / Sarah Ivey
Eleanor Catton has helped bring the history of Hokitika into the spotlight with her novel, The Luminaries. Photo / Sarah Ivey
Visitors to Hokitika are starting to look for something tangible from the acclaimed Booker Prize-winning novel The Luminaries.
Eleanor Catton's 832-page novel is based entirely in 1866 Hokitika, and now has visitors wanting location history and background to particular references in the book.
Both the Hokitika Museum and i-Site sayvisitor curiosity has steadily swelled. Museum director Julia Bradshaw said that increasingly visitors to the museum had read the book and were looking for a snapshot of life in early Hokitika.
"They want to find out more about Hokitika and what it was like in 1866," Ms Bradshaw said. "People are coming here hungry for information and wanting to find out more."
Particular locations of interest for Luminaries readers include the site of the former courthouse in Sewell St, Revell St, the West Coast Times office, Gibson Quay, Wharf St and the beach.
Mr Verrall said The Luminaries had definitely given impetus to his existing tours, which had been re-jigged to expand on the life and times of Hokitika in The Luminaries period.
"It sort of melded into one so the book is now the basis of the tour," Mr Verrall said.