I Stayed at the Real White Lotus Hotel in Sicily—And Never Wanted to Leave – BusInsiders

I Stayed at the Real White Lotus Hotel in Sicily—And Never Wanted to Leave

- Culture - February 8, 2023

Ever since I watched The Talented Mr. Ripley at an age that was, frankly, far too young—despite the film’s sophisticated trappings, Jude Law does get brutally clubbed about the head with an enormous wooden oar—I have been a sucker for the glamorous promise of an Italian vacation. It may be a cliché, but the reason I’ll always return to Italy’s boot is that it’s filled, from thigh to heel, with places that feel as though they could exist nowhere else in the world—from the mind-boggling engineering of the Venetian waterways to the devil-may-care energy of Naples with its whizzing motorcycles and crumbling Baroque churches. 

Still, nowhere in Italy has captured my imagination like Sicily—or has felt so uniquely its own place. A crossroads for various Mediterranean civilizations for centuries (and still to this day), its rich and incredibly varied landscapes serve as a backdrop for one of the country’s most strange and seductive cultures. The seafood pasta isn’t half bad either. 

Last year I was lucky enough to travel to this sprawling island to write a guide to its hotels, with a specific focus on two new openings. But one of these new openings, the Four Seasons San Domenico Palace, felt particularly magical: Situated on a rocky outcrop on the edge of the popular hilltop town of Taormina, it seemed to capture everything that has made Sicily such an enchanting destination for travelers from the Grand Tour onwards. 

Photo: Peter Vitale

As it is housed in a former convent first constructed in the 14th century—indeed, an entire wing includes rooms in the former cloisters, albeit with a few of the nun’s cells combined into more spacious living quarters—peeling back the layers of its past is a history lesson in and of itself. Converted into a hotel in the late 19th century as Italian tourism began to truly boom, the property later added a wing in the Liberty style (an Italian variation of Art Nouveau) to house guests including Oscar Wilde and D.H. Lawrence. Throughout World War II it served as a headquarters for the German army. (After the war, it returned to its function as a hotel, attracting a breathlessly star-studded array of jet-set guests including Greta Garbo, Audrey Hepburn, Elizabeth Taylor, and Sophia Loren.)

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