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Bloomsday DUBLIN 2014

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Bloomsday 
in Dublin 2014
It was a century to the day, June 16 1904,  
after Leopold Bloom, 
James Joyce's fictional character 
in Ulysses walked through the streets of Dublin, 
and Pat Keenan enjoyed his native city's 
day of celebration ... he took his camera along
Photos: Pat Keenan

Sweny Chemist Shop "Mr Bloom raised a cake (of soap) to his nostrils. Sweet lemony wax.
- I'll take this one, he said."    Ulysses, J. Joyce (1922)
     In 1904 James Joyce, then a young man, dropped in here to collect a prescription from the pharmacist, Frederick William Sweny. He would later describe in Chapter 5 of his novel Ulysses how Leopold Bloom, enters the shop, admires its bottles, potions and compounds, then he smells the lemony soap on the counter and takes a bar with him.
Swenys Chemists, 1 Lincoln Pl, Dublin 2 www.sweny.ie/





Finn's Hotel
Just 50 yards from this shop was Finn's Hotel where Nora Barnacle worked   and where she stood him up on June 14, 1904. Two days later she succumbed  and so June 16 would go down in literary history as the day of Blooms walk in Ulysses


Lunch
Meeting House Square in Temple Bar
The James Joyce Centre hosted an afternoon of readings and songs from Ulysses with writer and director  Peter Sheridan as Master of Ceremonies.
The James Joyce Centre, promotes the life and work of James Joyce, 
35 North Great George’s Street, Dublin 1, Ireland Web: http://jamesjoyce.ie/
Peter Sheridan: Rooney Prize for Literature (1977), two Arts Council Bursaries (1982 and 1986) -writer in residence Abbey Theatre 1980 and with brother Jim - founded the Project Theatre Co.
Peter Sheridan
Aine Lawlor: radio and television broadcaster -co-hosts Morning Ireland  RTÉ Radio 1 
Clelia Murphy_plays Fair City's Niamh Cassidy
 
MorganCrowley_tenor
Phelim Drew, actor - son of the Irish folk singer Ronnie Drew.
Deirdre Masterson_soprano 

Declan Gorman
 
Katie O’Kelly: performance of extracts from 'Joyced'
Declan Gorman


Sinead Murphy and Darina Gallagher
David Wray

Elayne Harrington, aka: Temper-Mental, aka, MissElayneous


Artist Robert Ballagh: his portrait of James Joyce graced the old Irish £10 note 

Sources & Further Reading:
Ellmann, Richard: James Joyce– New and Revised edition, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1982.
Feshbach, Sidney: ‘June 16, 1904: Joyce’s Date with Nora?’ in James Joyce Quarterly, vol. 21, no. 4, Summer 1984.
Joyce, James: Letters of James Joyce, vol. I, edited by Stuart Gilbert, London: Faber & Faber, 1957; vol. III, edited by Richard Ellmann, London: Faber & Faber, 1966.
Selected Letters of James Joyce, edited by Richard Ellmann, London:Faber & Faber, 1975.
Maddox, Brenda: Nora – A Biography of Nora Joyce, London: Hamish Hamilton, 1988.

Marche, a Flavour of Italy

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Marche:a Flavour of Italy
Food and wine producers, from Marche, Italy, 
gathered recently in Pinocchio Italian Restaurant and Wine Bar 
in Ranelagh, Dublin, to showcase their best  food and wine. 
Pat Keenan went along.

Photos: Pat Keenan

      Some of the flavours and delights of the Marche region made their way into Pinocchio Italian Restaurant and Wine Bar in Ranelagh, Dublin, recently. Here are a few good Italian food contacts.

      Acqualagna Tartufi (Acqualagna Truffles) with thirty years experience from fresh truffles to products related to truffles, (puri, sauces, oils, dairy products, truffled honey and all kinds of truffle and food mixes) For more information and a full range of products: www.acqualagnatartufi.it
      Combine countryside with seaside in Marche. Add good food and wine to a panoramic view of the entire Metauro Valley and the spectacular Gola del Furlo (Furlo Canyon). Villa Tombolina is the perfect for a relaxing few days. www.villatombolina.com/
      Try some 
Italian cold meat cuts, prosciutto, salami, pancetta, goletta (pig's cheek), lonza or capocollo, -all with only salt, pepper and aromatic herbs added. For more details check out: www.fraticellisalumi.it/


      With soil and the land ideal for growing grapes like Bianchello, Sangiovese, Verdicchio and Chardonnay. Ferriera is ideally positioned to produce some great wines. When visiting the area, they can arrange vineyard and vegetable garden tours. Best book in advance.
www.aziendaferriera.it/en/


      T&C Tentazioni and Acqualagna's truffles is surrounded by woods of oak and holm oak trees, in the Apennine countryside around Mounts Catria and Nerone Acqualagna.  It accounts for over two thirds of Italy's white truffles.  For more information and some interesting recipes visit:
www.truffle.it/




      Mascia Delicatezze is a homemade range of traditional Italian baking. 
Only Italian ingredients, local flour, spices and, only extra virgin olive oil - no fats, marge or butter, no food colouring no artificial preservatives - that balanced Mediterranean diet.
For more information and to SHOP online
www.masciadelicatezze.com


      Bruscia wines are produced by a family-run farm , almost 50 hectars of land  growing certified organic grapes. Their white wine is made predominantly from the Bianchello or “Biancame” grape, other varieties are cultivated include: Malvasia, Famoso and Incrocio Bruni. 
For their reds  the predominant grape is Sangiovese and other varieties include Montepulciano, Lacrima di Morro,  Cabernet, Merlot and Centesimino.
For more information and a listing for all their wines, visit
www.brusciavini.it


Mauri Maurice, in the hills of Montefeltro, produce a wine whose recipe, they say, "was found between the memories of grandparents." Great with cakes, cookies, chocolate and on bostrengo (typical sweet from Marche).
For more information www.maurimaurizio.it


     Cantina Terracruda: DOC wines of the Marche in the province of Pesaro and Urbino.
Pergola Rosso DOC is a small region within Le Marche.  The wine of this region is made from Vernaccia di Pergola (otherwise known as Aleatico), and surprises many people by having a quality that is both sweet and dry at the same time.  Many compare it to the Lacrima variety.
Lubaco is aged for at least one year in large oak barrels and following fining in the bottle,  is matured in oak barrels for 14-18 months and refined for at least 6 months in the bottle.  The result is a full bodied red wine with an intense and complex aroma. I loved the peppery full with sweet tannins taste leaving a round aftertaste. More information: www.terracruda.it

     Starting in 1930 the farm Mariotti has produced red and white wines, Bianchello DOC - Sangiovese DOC Colli Pesavento - Marche IGT Bianco - Marche Rosso IGT - Spirits of bianchello - mono-varietal extra virgin olive oils and grappa. For more information and a full product list click on: www.cantinemariotti.it

For Italian cooking classes in Dublin contact:
For food and wine centered tours in Italy contact:
For a real taste of Italian cooking visit:
Pinocchio Italian Restaurant and Wine Bar, Luas Kiosk, Ranelagh, Dublin 6   www.flavourofitaly.net/content/8-pinocchio-restaurant

Comiso in South East Sicily

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Comisoin South East Sicily
In his second Sicilian report
Pat Keenan flew into a new airport, 
visited a charming town, 
admired some great artistic riches
 and had another encounter with dead monks
Photos: Pat Keenan
Comiso First Communion: boys celebrate. 

Church of of Santa Maria delle Grazie: precious altar and tabernacle
     Comiso in South East Sicily is the site of the recently opened Vincenzo Magliocco Airport, better known as Comiso Airport. It changed from military to civil use in 2008. You can fly there with Ryanair in just three and a half hours, direct from Dublin. From there, in all likelihood, you will be whisked off to some sunny coastal beach, a golf course or to one of many beautiful resorts. But just a mere 5km/3 miles from the airport is the charming historic town of Comiso itself and it contains an extraordinary, and somewhat macabre, place of worship.
     On a warm sunny day walking around this charming town, we had our morning shots of coffee, a mid morning cooling of icy granita siciliana and encountered a beautiful bride arrive at the steep steps to the Church of Santa Maria delle Stelle.
     There are quite a few churches in Comiso with great artistic riches, so we traipsed around a few ending in the south of the town at the Church of of Santa Maria delle Grazie and known as the Church the Capuchins.
     The church contains a precious altar and tabernacle painstakingly made with intricate craftsmanship from inlaid wood. Then there is also the attached mortuary chapel, called appropriately, the 'Chapel of the Dead' containing 50 mummified monks lying in built-in slanting alcoves.
The only one wearing 18th century civilian clothes
     They were all Capuchin friars or members of the Third Order of the Capchins and positioned so that their faces are always looking outwards. Twenty are tagged with their name and dates of death from 1742 to 1838. Those without tags are the older ones date as far back as the 17th century. They are all wearing Capuchin habits, except one, wearing 18th century civilian clothes and he is also displayed in an upright posture.

First encounter with dead monks
     I recalled that my first encounter with a display of dead monks was beneath the church of Santa Maria della Concezione dei Cappuccini on the Via Veneto in Rome. I remember seeing a distraught young tourist flee the crypt in tears of fear.
     James Joyce, when he worked in Rome in 1906, took a very negative view of the Eternal City and had wrote to his brother Stanislaus: "Rome reminds me of a man who lives by exhibiting to travellers his grandmother’s corpse." and he wrote of his nightmares: "death, corpses, assassinations, in which I take an unpleasantly prominent part." Interestingly it was in Rome that he wrote his short story 'The Dead', which tells of the very contrasting view of  the treatment of the dead in his native Dublin.
     The Capuchins, have a different point of view and contend that the display of deceased monks is not meant to be macabre, but rather a reminder of our short time alive and of our own mortality.
     There are other better known collections of mummies in Sicily, the biggest, with approximately 3,000 mummies, is in Palermo in the basement of the church of Santa Maria della Pace, This one, at the Church of Santa Maria della Grazia, is almost entirely unknown outside of Comiso.
More Pictures:
Outside the Church of Santa Maria delle Stelle:
father prepares to give away the bride

Travel File
I flew with Ryanair (www.ryanair.com) direct from Dublin to Comiso, in South East Sicily (Thursdays and Sundays) They also fly London Stansted direct to Comiso
Ryanair also fly Dublin direct to Palermo on Mondays and Thusdays

For Information on travels in Italy: 

DESTINATIONS: Malaga Spain

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DESTINATIONS: Málaga 

      If you are visiting anywhere near Málaga in Spain during the next few months there is an exhibition worth a visit at the Museo Picasso between June 23 and September 24 2014 entitled El Lissitzky, the Experience of Totality (La Experiencia de la Totalidad) - an exhibition that brings together work by one of the most influential and experimental artists of the Avant-garde.
El Lissitzky and Sophie Lissitzky-Küppers: SSSR na Stroike (magazine) 1940
Fundación José María Castañé, Madrid
     The exhibition, a duplicate of Lissitzky’s Prounenraum, created in 1923 for the Greater Berlin Art Exhibition, has been set up in Museo Picasso Málaga. Over 130 paintings, photographs, illustrated books, magazines, films and architectural designs make up the exhibition, which is curated by Oliva María Rubio and co-produced by Museo Picasso Málaga, alongside MART Museo d’artemoderna e contemporánea di Trento e Rovereto, Fundació Catalunya-La Pedrera, Barcelona and La Fábrica, Madrid.
The Constructor (Self-portrait)1924                                                                 The Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles
     El Lissitzky (Eliezer MarkovichLissitzky, Russia 1890-1941), was influential, experimental and controversial and worked in the period between two world wars. Lissitzky approached art as a response to the demands of his time - a time of crisis, profound change, and of faith in industry and revolution.

     Born into a middle-class Jewish family, this architect, painter, graphic designer, exhibition designer and photographer worked with the Soviets after the 1917 October Revolution, with European Avant-garde art in the 1920s, and as a propagandist for Stalin’s regime in the 1930s until his death in 1941.
Proun 4B by El Lissitzky (Oil on canvas)                                 Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid
     Lissitzky contributed to the development of Suprematism, alongside Kazimir Malevich, and with Constructivism after that. El Lissitzky invented his own form of artistic expression, which he named Proun, and his work made strong connections outside Russia, both with the De Stijl group in The Netherlands, and in the teachings of the Bauhausin Germany.
“L’URSS en Construction” (magazine) April-May, 1936          Collection Juan Manuel and Mónica Bonet, Photo: Julio César González

MUSEO PICASSO MÁLAGA, Palacio de Buenavista, C/ San Agustín, 8,  29015 Málaga
www.museopicassomalaga.org

Armchair Travel June 2014

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Armchair Travel
Just returned from an actual visit 
to Ragusa province in South East Sicily 
we welcome Inspector Montalbano 
back to our TV screens

     Up to now, travellers to Sicily, traditionally headed to the capital city, Palermo, on the northwest of the island or to the east coast cities of Catania, Taormina and Syracuse. Southeast Sicily, miles from an airport was more difficult to reach. All that has changed
     With the recent opening of Comiso Airport (officially Vincenzo Magliocco Airport), you can fly there with Ryanair in just three and a half hours, direct from Dublin (Thursdays and Sundays). They also fly from London Stansted direct to Comiso. The  airport changed from military use (a major NATO base during the Cold War) to civil use in 2008. 
    As if on cue, BBC4 are showing series one of the popular Italian TV mystery drama Inspector Montalbano (BBC4, 9:00pm Saturday June 28). Set and filmed in the province of Ragusa and along the coast of southeast Sicily, between Scoglitti and Pozzallo, it is worth watching for the sun-drenched landscape of dry-stone walls, gnarled olive trees, and towns like Sicicli where Montalbano's police station is actually the town hall and the guesthouse in the village of Punta Secca where the Inspector lives overlooking the sea. 
Montalbano consoles Lapecora's widow's during interview                  Photo: RAI / BBC

Southeast Sicily                                                                                                                  Map:  HOLIDAYezine
     In this the first episode, sub-titled 'The Snack Thief' Montalbano investigates the killing of Lapecora, a local businessman. The victim's widow alleges that Karima, his Tunisian mistress, was responsible but she seems to have disappeared. After finding Karima's five-year-old son Francois, Montalbano realises that the case might be linked to that of a Tunisian man, killed on the same day that Lapecora died. Montalbano entrusts his partner Livia with looking after Francois but she becomes more and more attached to the young orphaned boy.

Further reading:
 Comiso in South East Sicily. Pat Keenan flew into a new airport, visited a charming town, admired some great artistic riches and had another encounter with dead monks http://holidayezine.blogspot.ie/2014/06/comiso-in-sicily-charming-town-new.html

How to cook Arancini.  Pat Keenan visited the Southern Sicilian province of Ragusa and tried his hand at cooking a local delicacy
http://holidayezine.blogspot.ie/2014/06/how-to-cook-arancini-pat-keenan-visited.html

Books by Andrea Camilleri
     This Italian TV detective drama is based on the novels and short stories of Sicilian writer Andrea Camilleri. He sets his books in Vigata, a fictional town, broadly based is his own home town of Porto Empedocle, further up the coast from the TV locations. Many of the books, now translated into English, are available from good bookshops and online at www.amazon.co.uk  www.easons.com   etc.
     To read in the order they were written, start with The Shape of Water and then The Terracotta Dog, The Snack Thief, The Voice of the Violin and Excursion to Tindari. There are more but that's enough to get a flavor. 

HOTEL/RESTAURANT WATCH: Italy

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HOTEL/RESTAURANT WATCH:Italy
A list of recent openings/re-openings 
of hotels in Italy ...and updates on 
some interesting restaurants 
- all with live website links to more information

PORTRAIT FIRENZE (5*)IN FLORENCE,
www.portraitfirenze.com
The Lungarno Collection, owned by the Ferragamo family, opened Portrait Firenze in May 2014.  With views over the River Arno and iconic Ponte Vecchio, Florence, the hotel is inspired by the birth of Italian haute couture the 1950s.  Each of the thirty-four suites is designed using hand-crafted furniture, a kitchenette, includes complimentary use of an iPad, access to a music and film library and a 'gourmet' stocked mini bar which can also be stocked in advance with personalised preferences. www.portraitfirenze.com
INDIGO ROME – ST. GEORGE HOTEL (5*)IN ROME
Intercontinental Hotel's new boutique hotel in Rome, in Via Giulia, in the heart of old Rome opened in June 2014. The 64 room hotel is a mixture of Renaissance and modern design and offers a spa, a restaurant, a terrace with bar and free wi-fi in all areas. www.hotelindigorome.com
NH PALAZZO BAROCCI (4*)IN VENICE
www.nh-hotels.com/nh/en/hotels/italy/venice/nh-palazzo-barocci.html

The old Manin NH Hotel has been totally overhauled and upgraded by the NH Hotel Group and re-opened May 2014. The hotel is located facing the Rialto Bridge and it is built on the site of the old Teatro Sant’Angelo, dating back to the 18th century. The 59 rooms are furnished in 5 different styles, a bar “Doge” with a true Venetian atmosphere and a garden.
www.nh-hotels.com/nh/en/hotels/italy/venice/nh-palazzo-barocci.html
NH PARMA HOTEL (4*) IN PARMA
Just opened, the new NH Parma Hotel is set in a new architectural complex which also includes a renovated railway station. Near the historic centre of Parma, it offers 120 rooms, restaurant serving local and Italian dishes.
www.nh-hotels.com/nh/en/hotels/italy/parma/nh-parma.html
VILLE SULL’ARNO HOTEL (5*) IN FLORENCE
www.hotelvillesullarno.com

The Ville sull’Arno Hotel has re-opened after extensive renovation and improvement work. The Hotel has 45 rooms, a spa, open air garden swimming pool, the “Flora e Fauno” Restaurant, Dante’s Bar designed in a 19th century feel. The Ville sull’Arno was originally built in the 15th century and it was a country retreat for the Florentine nobility, in the 19th century was a workshop for the Macchiaioli painters. www.hotelvillesullarno.com
THE PALAZZO PARIGI HOTEL IN MILAN
www.palazzoparigi.com
The Palazzo Parigi has recently opened the new Duomo Suite with views over the city. The new suite comprises a living area with kitchenette, walk-in wardrobe, main bathroom and second bathroom. The suite can be combined with the interconnecting Suite Prestige and Deluxe Room for a total of 3 bedrooms to form an apartment. www.palazzoparigi.com
VAIR SPA AT BORGO EGNAZIA IN PUGLIA
The new Vair Spa is located within Borgo Egnazia Resort in Puglia, promising to to 'nurture the visitor's physical, spiritual and emotional wellbeing.' Built in typical Apulina style, 11 treatment rooms, a couple’s spa suite with private garden and a Roman water therapy suite at the heart of the building. www.vairspa.com



FUTURE WATCH
THE EXCELSIOR HOTEL GALLIA (5*) IN MILAN
Starwood hotel and resorts have recently announced the re-opening of the historic Excelsior Hotel Gallia in Milan which is scheduled for November 2014. The hotel will have 235 rooms and suites, a restaurant and a bar with panoramic terrace on the top floor, a lounge bar and cigar room, a spa, swimming pool and gym, two ballrooms and meeting spaces. www.starwoodhotels.com
JW MARRIOTT (5*) RESORT AND SPA  IN VENICE
A new hotel is being re-developed by JW Marriott Hotels in Venice at Sacca Sessola and is scheduled to open mid March 2015. The hotel will have 266 rooms.
www.marriott.co.uk/hotels/hotel-information/travel/vcejw-jw-marriott-venice-resort-and-spa/
MELIA SIRACUSA MARE RESORT IN SICILY
The new Melia Siracusa Mare Resort is scheduled to open in 2015 in Syracuse. It will have 235 rooms, 140 apartments, sport facilities, an 18-hole golf course, swimming pools, spa and a private beach. www.melia.com


NEW RESTAURANTS
ORO RESTAURANT AT THE BELMOND HOTEL CIPRIANI IN VENICE
www.belmond.com/hotel-cipriani-venice/cipriani_restaurants

Michelin starred Chef Andrea Berton
 
www.ristoranteberton.com
The Oro, just opened at the iconic Belmond Hotel Cipriani in Venice, overlooking the lagoon, is headed up by Chef Davide Bisetto who was awarded two Michelin stars in France. Gold leaf ceiling, handmade Murano glass chandelier, fine Rubelli chair fabrics, three emerald green glass sculptures, blown glass candelabra contribute - need we say more?
www.belmond.com/hotel-cipriani-venice/cipriani_restaurants
RISTORANTE BERTON IN MILAN
Ristorante Berton, opened earlier this year, is the brainchild of Michelin starred Chef Andrea Berton. Berton prides himself in offering traditional and unusual dishes in a la carte and tasting menus. www.ristoranteberton.com
D&G MARTINI BISTROT IN MILAN
All the glamour of the 50’s in the heart of Milan in Corso Venezia,  the new D&G Martini Bistrot, is, we gather, ideal to grab a quick lunch, sip an aperitif or have dinner inspired by true Sicilian tradition. www.dolcegabbana.com/martini
RISTORANTE UNICO MILANO IN MILAN
Michelin stared
Chef Felice Lo Basso

www.unicorestaurant.it
Felice Lo Basso is the new chef at the Unico Milano Restaurant on the 20th floor of the WCT Tower in Milan. Breathtaking views over the city, a cuisine reflecting the skills of Chef Lo Basso, combining sea and mountain ingredients, give a new direction for the restaurant - now aiming for its second Michelin star. www.unicorestaurant.it
GREZZO RAW FOOD CHOCOLATERIE 
AND PATISSERIE IN ROME
In the trendy Monti district of Rome it calls itself to be the first raw food patisserie and chocolaterie in Rome. Raw chocolate without any added fat promises to be more healthy, genuine, but also delicious, they recommend semifreddo with pears and chocolate, tiramisu’ and sachertorte.  www.grezzoitalia.it
CAFFE’ MARINETTI  AT THE MAJESTIC HOTELIN BOLOGNA
The new Caffe’ Marinetti opened earlier this year at the Grand Hotel Majestic (formerly Baglioni Hotel) in Bologna. The Caffe’ s name is   homage to the founder of the Futuristic Movement, Filippo Tommaso Farinetti whose Futuristic exhibition was hosted in the basement of the same hotel a hundred years ago.  http://grandhotelmajestic.duetorrihotels.com/en/hotel-5-stars-luxury-bologna/caf%C3%A8-marinetti


The hotels, restaurants above are listed for information only. They are sourced from information received and, as yet, we have not sampled or visited any of them and so this listing is just that and is not meant to be interpreted as a recommendation.

DESTINATIONS July 2014

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DESTINATIONS July 2014
Puglia Region Village 
is in Dublin’s George’s Docks 
July 6-15, 2014

Puglia                                       Map: HOLIDAYezine
     Puglia Region Village is coming to Dublin’s George’s Docks from 6 to 15 July when it will be open to the public from 12.00noon to 8.00pm.
     Puglia (Apulia) is the heel on the "boot" of Italy with the Adriatic Sea to the east, the Ionian Sea to the southeast, and the Strait of Òtranto and Gulf of Taranto in the south.
     The Road Show #Weareinpuglia will be in the main European cities connected with direct flights and this includes Dublin.
     The public can experience at first hand flavors, fragrances, images, sounds, music and traditions in the Puglia Village, an exhibition area of approximately 250sq set up in Dublin’s George’s Docks.

Below: the programme detailing the full schedule of events open to the public taking place at the Puglia Village, George’s Docks, from July 6 to July 15


Ireland and UK direct flights 
to Bari in Puglia
Ryanairwww.ryanair.com
fly direct Dublin to Bari
Ryanairwww.ryanair.com fly direct London Stansted to Bari
British Airwayswww.britishairways.com fly direct London Gatwick to Bari
easyJetwww.eastjet.com fly direct London Gatwick to Bari

For information on Puglia
www.viaggiareinpuglia.it/hp/en

Irish Tour Operators
DISCOVER PUGLIA: www.discoverypuglia.com and http://luxury.discoverypuglia.com
ITALY.IE: www.italy.ie/guides/puglia/
LOWCOSTHOLIDAYS: www.lowcostholidays.ie/italy/puglia-holidays.htm
TOPFLIGHT: www.topflight.ie/summer-sun/italy/puglia
TRAVEL DEPARTMENT: www.traveldepartment.ie/itinerary-details/undiscovered-italy-highlights-of-puglia/622?so=1&destination=6152&deptId=23641
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ITAA's Top Deals of the Week
 This week the ITAA have compiled 
three sun holiday deals available on itaa.ie/offers 

Mediterranean Cruise
Seven Night Western Mediterranean Cruise, January & February 2015, from €599pp
MSC Splendida
     A 7 night Mediterranean cruise this winter aboard the MSC Splendida. Departs Barcelona, Spain and takes in  Marseille, France; Italy, Genoa, Rome,  Palermo in Sicily, and La Goulette, Tunisia during the daily stops. The MSC Splendida offers numerous accommodations including, 4 swimming pools, an adult-only pool deck, a squash court, full service spa, 4 restaurants, and more.
     Price of €599 is based on one person and includes return flights, 7 night cruise, meals and entertainment onboard.
For more information on this offer available from e.travel visit: http://itaa.ie/msc-splendida-7-nt-winter-med-fly-cruise-offer-from-e499-pps/  

Orlando, Florida
7 Nights in sunny Orlando, Florida, 25th August 2014, from only €569pp
Walt Disney World
     In the Florida sun at the 4 star Rosen Centre Hotel located in the heart of Orlando. Relaxing at the hotel pool or taking the complimentary transportation to Universal Orlando, Sea World Adventure Park and Wet’n Wild Water Park. Walt Disney World is also close-by, a 10 minute commute. Rosen Centre Hotel offers dining at 4 on-site restaurants, a coffee shop and hotel bar. 
     Price of €569 is based on 2 adults/2 children sharing and includes return flights and 7 nights at the Rosen Centre Hotel; Departing 25th August 2014 (add 7 nights for only €70pp)
For more information or to book this Tour America offer visit: http://itaa.ie/sun-deal-to-orlando-florida/ Reference number 469970

Bali, Indonesia
Bali, Indonesia 10 night stay, 1st October-19th December, €1160pp
Bebek Tepi Sawah Villa & Spa
     Orient Travel is offering an autumn 10 night sun package for Bali, Indonesia. First 5 nights at the 3 star Puri Bambu Hotel and 5 more nights in a one-bedroom villa at the 4 star Bebek Tepi Sawah Villa & Spa. Both hotels offer a taste of traditional Balinese culture. Travel between the two hotels is complimentary in an AC vehicle.
     Prices are available from €1160 based on 2 persons and includes; return flights from Dublin to Denpasar Bali, 5 nights BB accommodation in Delux Room in 3* Puri Bambu Hotel, 5 nights BB accommodation in one-bedroom Ubud Villa in 4* Bebek Tepi Villa & Spa in Ubud, return transfer airport/hotel in AC vehicle and transfer between Jimbaran Hotel and Ubud Hotel.  Travel between 1st October 14- 19th December 14 9book by 15th July 2014).
For more information on this offer available from Orient Travel visit: http://itaa.ie/sun-deal-bali-10-nights-from-only-e1160/

Miami Beach - fashion, coffee, murder and a serial killer

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Miami Vice 
- a 5 star hotel, 
morning coffee, 
a murdered fashion icon 
and a serial killer
Pat Keenan recalls a 2001 visit to Miami Beach

 The Versace Villa: locked gates in 2001                                                                                         2001photo: Pat Keenan
     The Villa By Barton G, an extravagant 5 star hotel, was opened recently on Ocean Drive, Miami Beach in Florida (2). This, the former home of Italian fashion designer Gianni Versace, is now open to all, with the proviso that money isn't an issue. I enjoyed Susan d'Darcy's review 'Is this the most OTT hotel in the world' in the Sunday Times, where she reminds us of that quote from Dolly Parton: "It takes a lot of money to look this cheap." Ouch.
News Café                                                                                                                2001photo: Pat Keenan

     The mansion was where Gianni Versace lived until July 15, 1997 when he was shot dead on the steps outside.  He had just returned from a morning walk to the News Cafe(1) for his morning papers and coffee. He was murdered by a spree or serial killer Andrew Cunanan, who had already killed at least five other people during a three month period in 1997
     Eight days later more than 100 police and FBI agents surrounded a two-story boathouse moored at 5250 Collins Avenue(3), after a reports of a gunshot from inside. When they eventually stormed in they found Andrew Cunanan had shot himself to death with the same gun he used to murder Versace.
     Gianni Versace's ashes were returned to the family's estate near Cernobbio, Lake Como, in northern Italy.
Miami Beach: locations                                     Map:HOLIDAYezine
     In 2001 during a visit to Miami Beach, and out of an admittedly morbid curiosity, I went to find the boathouse. It was long gone. In 1998 the city of Miami Beach, frustrated that the houseboat's owner, German businessman Matthias Ruehl, had not removed the sunken vessel, had it flattened and towed away. I did however find where it was moored by using news shots from the time of the police siege that showed a small white fountain. These are my pictures:
This small fountain faced the front of the boathouse                                                  2001photo: Pat Keenan
Mooring: boathouse was removed in 1998                                                                    2001photo: Pat Keenan
Travel File
     Villa By Barton G guests can stay in the designer's former bedroom in the 1,174 sq.ft. (110 sg.m.) Villa Suite for from $2,200 (€1,600) per night but other suites start at $795 (€580) per night. Please note that these prices do not include breakfast
The Villa Miami Beach, 1116 Ocean Drive, Miami Beach, Florida. http://thevillabybartong.com/   
     News Cafe is a sidewalk cafe, newsstand at the corner of 8th Street and Ocean Drive in the Art Deco District of Miami Beach.
News Cafe, 800 Ocean Drive, Miami Beach, FL 33139 www.newscafe.com/

More Information


Irish Operators
www.sunway.ie/usa

From HOLIDAY magazine archives 2002

Miami Nice -and so is Palm Beach


Mauritius

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Delicious Mauritius

It was a bit of a Brad Pitt/George Clooney 
dilemma for Isabel Conway.... in the end 
she settled for better value and a bit more buzz
View from the open plan entrance lobby of Zilwa Attitude hotel resort at Kalodyne on the north coast of Mauritius.
     “It is a bit of a Brad Pitt/George Clooney dilemma, you’re not going to be disappointed either way” the reader who wanted to know “which is better the Maldives or Mauritius.” was diplomatically informed by a holiday magazine travel guru. The Maldives might be prettier and glitzier than its rival but there was more of a buzz to Mauritius, more to see and do and it was also better value, Travel Guru pointed out.
     I have not yet visited the Maldives. But George Clooney is certainly my type I quickly decide   as our overnight Air Mauritius flight from London dips in to land revealing picture postcard perfect ribbons of turquoise lagoon ringing a dramatic interior landscape of cone like dormant volcanoes, surrounded by lush forest.
Map:HOLIDAYezine
     Some 2,000 kms off Africa’s south East coast, (see map) pear shaped Mauritius is small, just 42 miles long and 29 miles wide. Yet this Indian Ocean paradise ranging from pristine white beaches fringed with palm trees and lush jungle interior appears much larger due to differences in gradient, variety in landscape and twists and turns of small roads, bordering sugar cane fields and sleepy fishing settlements away from the highways.
     Intrepid traveller and writer Mark Twain took a voyage to Mauritius while travelling the world in the late 1800s compiling a Lonely Planet Guide of his day called “Following the Equator”. He wrote of enjoying “splendid scenery” and the island’s interesting legacy of a diverse ethnic mix.
     In the past rival colonies grabbed a slice of Mauritius, from the Dutch and French to the British because of its location as a trading post for slaves and spices from the African continent and sugar. Back in 1968 the island became independent from Britain.

Preparing the sugar cane to squeeze out sap
     The legacy of the past is reflected in the ethnic diversity of the population and languages spoken as well as the island’s varied cuisine – think Creole, Chinese, Indian and French.  The nearest I came to a British culinary legacy were the hotel resorts breakfast bacon and eggs, fried bread and grilled mushrooms.
     A Creole lesson, a daybreak boat tour with a local fisherman, traditional cooking with a local lady, tours from tea plantations to rum making, authentic markets to Hindu shrines and towering waterfalls – these are just some of the distractions for those willing to wander beyond infinity pools, water sports and sunbathing on Mauritius.
     Encouraged by our charming host Guillaume, Assistant manager at Zilwa Attitude, the latest property in a well established chain of quality Attitude hotel resorts on Mauritius, we set our phone alarms for the ungodly hour of 5.30am and a daybreak date with a boatman.
     A fleeting transformation from inky blackness into shimmering swathes of orange tinged gold, clouds outlined as if with strobe lighting while the sun slowly moves above the horizon of the Indian Ocean was a sight to behold, Guillaume has promised.  And he is absolutely right.
     Later as the sun slowly climbs up the Jacobs ladder we wade knee deep in lukewarm water  on to a little beach of bleached soft sand  taking a  quick dip before tucking into a picnic breakfast serenaded by cheeky birds dive bombing bread and pineapple chunks.

Lazily installed on a tranquil beach, 
listening to the gently lapping waves, 
maybe a rum cocktail in hand 
     Chugging back to our horseshoe shaped  resort pier a flying fish appears so we scramble for cameras and iphones.  A sudden splash rents the glistening water, a pair of dolphins chasing their morning snack. Having lost the flying fish the dolphins swim beside our boat, leaping and showing off.
     It is well worth the effort – hard as that might be when temperatures sizzle and you are lazily installed on a tranquil beach, listening to the gently lapping waves, rum cocktail maybe in hand to scratch below the surface of Mauritius, or ‘Maurice’, to French visitors who have always loved the island
Four Seasons Anahita Spa
     Start with the capitol Port Louis. Browse the galleries and craft market of the Caudan Waterfront before heading to the authentic bustling Central market where you encounter an aroma of exotic spices mixed with the slightly rancid mingling of meat and fish smells, pyramids of fresh  fruit and vegetables.

Whatever your ailment
- there's an infusion to cure it. 
     Have a chat, even a consultation with Mr Mootoosamy,  fourth generation herbalist who claims – whatever your ailment – he has an infusion to cure it.
     Then climb up to the Citadel and Fort for a superb view of the port and the oldest Racecourse in the southern hemisphere below. Before you leave town be sure to drop by the Penny Blue museum and in the gloom stand in awe at the shrine of the Penny Blue. The postage stamp, barely the size of your thumb nail was bought for an astonishing $2.2 million.
It is one of the world’s great philatelic rarities. A glaring misprint back in the 1800s saw ‘post office’ instead of’ postage paid’ printed on the consignment, only one or two of them still in existence.
With some of the best stretches of beach and largest lagoon on Mauritius the renowned Four Seasons at Anahita  is among the top hotel resorts of the Indian Ocean, on the south east coast, our base for the next few nights.
     From here we visited the Bois Cheri Tea plantation, touring a busy processing plant and meeting guide Azad who came to work at Cheri aged 14 packing 200 tea packets a day. Today a German built machine on site packs 10,000 daily. Surrounded by hillside tea plantations we sample various teas at the Scenic Bois Cheri Chalet whose restaurant offers chicken with green tea sauce or prawns marinated in exotic flavour tea. Sampling another spin off - tea chutney it is definitely an ‘acquired’ taste we agree.
We needed no such acquired taste at Rhumerie de Chamarel  later. Following a tasty lunch at its L’Alchimiste Restaurant we are ready to  embark on a cane to bottle discovery of Mauritian produced premium rums .
     Vanessa, the rum expert encourages us to develop our knowledge of the famous exotic drink in all its varied types and vintages, without tasting any of the delicious lethal samples herself.
Afterwards we visited  yet another famous Mauritian landmark, the strange coloured earths of Chamarel whose blue, green, red and yellow colours are the result of erosion of volcanic ash. It is a place of tranquillity and beauty amid native plant life and neighbouring waterfalls.
Sugar cane juice for sale in Port Louis
     Four Seasons at Anahita  is the ultimate Mauritian luxury resort boasting superb accommodation, casual elegance and friendliness, top restaurants, a championship golf course and Spa.
     We stayed two glorious days – but lusted after a week, if not longer  in  our gorgeous villa with its own plunge pool and botanic garden. Bikes parked outside beckoned   further exploration and we only called a piloted buggy to move the luggage back to the open plan stylish main  buildings.  A free launch takes guests out from Four Seasons Anahita to beautiful Ile aux Cerfs tropical island in the lagoon.
     I spent a lovely morning playing at being a beachcomber. I strolled on a deserted spit of ivory coloured sand on Ile aux Cerfs and threw stranded sea stars back into the deep competing with a equally mad French woman doing the same with sea urchins, then wandering inland among tall tropical trees where squirrel like creatures with long tails turned out to be tribes of local mongoose scuttling through the undergrowth.
     The Four Seasons Golf Club is a championship course set against lush mountains and fringed by the huge crystal clear lagoon with complimentary unlimited rounds of golf for guests.
A range of inclusive water activities includes  excellent snorkelling.  My companion snorkeler had a panic attack as we scanned the bottom of a exciting coral garden patrolled by rainbow coloured fish and saw the (inert) green and brown striped sea snakes some curled, others stretched out along the seabed.
     Another highlight was the Four Seasons weekly Mauritian specialities buffet of sea fresh fish among dozens of  beautifully presented local and international dishes and a Sega dance performance, renowned in this magical corner of a Indian Ocean Eden.
     Here at Four Seasons the Sega, once an erotic dance slaves enjoyed after toiling in the cane fields , often a prelude to more intimate encounters, was a colourful  tastefully choreographed   performance with a smattering of calypso  and other genres, tuned perfectly to guests from all over the world which in a way sums up Mauritius, exhibiting the attributes of a tropical paradise -- ....exotic but never too much so.

Travel File:
Air Mauritius (www.airmauritius.com) daily flights ex London Heathrow. Emirates (www.emirates.ie) flights ex Dublin on ultra comfortable A380 aircraft with a short layover in Dubai, from €846. High end tour operator Abercrombie & Kent (www.abecrombiekent.co.uk) has a range of luxury holidays to Mauritius. For Zilwa Attitude see www.zilwa-hotel-mauritius.com (who have a current limited Summer 7 nights all inclusive offer including flights for €1,200 and €125 per person daily all inclusive low season.  Four Seasons Anahita (www.fourseasons.com/mauritius)
Topflight world wide (www.topflight.ie) feature holidays at Attitude hotel resorts Mauritius. See also Trailfinder (www.trailfinder.ie) and Travelmood (www.travelmood.ie) have flights plus a week’s accommodation from €1,399 depending on season.  Travelmood  offer Dubai and Mauritius 7 nights  accommodation only from €1,199 in October.  For Four Seasons see also www.elegantresorts.co.uk who offer 7 nights at Four Seasons Resort Anahita, half board basis, Garden villa, ex Dublin with Emirates from £3,195 p.p.

For more information on Mauritius: www.tourism-mauritius.mu

When to go:  Low season until October, temperatures around 25c and good hotel deals. High Season Nov-Feb when hotel prices and temps soar.



SICILY: Inspector Montalbano's Patch

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Inspector Montalbano'sSicily
Pat Keenan visits the patch of Italy's 
best-loved policeman, visits his places of work, 
his beachside home and samples his favorite foods.
Photos: Pat Keenan, unless otherwise stated

Roman actor Luca Zingaretti who plays Salvo Montalbano: relaxed
in the Hotel La Moresca-Maison de Charme, Marina di Ragusa.    

Photo courtesy of LaMaresca
     The Italian TV crime mystery series 'Inspector Montalbano,' currently showing Saturday nights on BBC4, is set in southeast Sicily in and around Ragusa and the enticing coastline between Scoglitti and Pozzallo. Now, thanks to the opening of a new airport in the area and direct Ryanair flights from Dublin, I abandoned my armchair and went, armed with a Kindle-full of Montalbano books, on the sunny trail of the police commissario.
     Traditionally, travellers to Sicily, headed to the capital, Palermo in the northwest or to the east coast cities of Catania, Taormina and Syracuse. Southeast Sicily, with no airport nearby, was more difficult to reach. All that has changed.
     With the recent opening of Comiso Airport (officially Vincenzo Magliocco Airport), you can fly there with Ryanair in just three and a half hours, direct from Dublin (Thursdays and Sundays). They also fly from London Stansted direct to Comiso. The  airport changed from military use (a major NATO base during the Cold War) to civil use in 2008. The historic Baroque-era town of Comiso, just  5km/3 miles from the airports, is well worth a visit and in the newer prequel TV series 'Young Montalbano' (also shown on BBC4) it was the setting to the young inspector's first police station. (see also: http://holidayezine.blogspot.ie/2014/06/comiso-in-sicily-charming-town-new.html)
Montalbano action in Piazza Italia, Sicicli.     Photo: RAI/BBC
Montalbano at home in Punta Secca              Photo: RAI/BBC
     'Inspector Montalbano' takes a bit of getting used to - it's an Italian way of acting, I suppose it mirrors a widely held view of the Italian way, fast talking, much shouting and a bit melodramatic - perhaps operatic is more appropriate. But, for all that, Roman actor Luca Zingaretti plays Salvo Montalbano well as a likable and layered character - macho, confident and yet sensitive and understanding. He shows a certain sophistication but then, all around him are foolish or annoying: (Police officer, Catarella) or weak: (his deputy Mimi), competence: (forensic specialist Jacomuzzi), self-important: (his boss, Bonetti-Alderighi). Women, of course, find him irresistible… and will his long term girlfriend, Livia, get him to commit to something more permanent?
     "Both farcical and endearing," said Maxim Jakubowski in The Guardian review of  the Montalbano books, and succinctly sums up with:  "Montalbano is a cross between Columbo and Chandler's Philip Marlowe, with the added culinary idiosyncrasies of an Italian Maigret." In the TV series, you can add the sunny landscapes and the chaotic architectural richness of Sicilian towns.
Montalbano locations                                                                                                  Map:HOLIDAYezine
      The TV programmes are based on the character created in the novels of Andrea Camilleri and are set in the fictional town of Vigata, in the equally fictional district of Montelusa. These places are based on his own home town of Porto Empedocle, in the district of Agrigento. Incidentally, in deference to Camilleri and Montalbamo, Porto Empedocle is now officially renamed Porto Empedocle Vigata and proudly has unvailed a statue of Inspector Montalbano.
As in the age-old practice of film/TV making, the settings for Vigata and Montalusa are in reality a composite of several places around the province of Ragusa and along the coast between Scoglitti and Pozzallo.
Sicicli: Piazza Italia where Palazzo Iacono is police HQ in fictional Montelusa
The office of Montalbano's superior Quaestor Bonetti-Alderighi (actually the office of the Mayor of Scicli)
Palazzo di Città (town hall), in Sicicli is Momtalbano's police station in Vigata
Palazzo di Città: the view of Sicicli from the Mayors office 
Sicicli
     An example of this composite is in Sicicli where the Palazzo di Città (town hall), becomes Momtalbano's police station in Vigata, whilst a stone's-throw away, the Palazzo Iacono in Piazza Italia, is the regional police HQ in Montelusa.
     In many episodes the hilltop church of San Matteo is a frequent backdrop. In itself worth a visit and the steps afford a wide-angled view across the town.
Punta Secca: HOLIDAYezine Editor Pat Keenan on Montalbano's balcony
Punta Secca 
     Punta Secca, also standing in for Montalbano's fictional town of Vigata, is in every episode.
Standing, in his house, on the balcony where, after his morning swim, Montalbano sips his coffee, I recalled an episode in The Track of Sand -  he wakes up and, from this very balcony, sees a dead horse on the beach below. Soon after, a beautiful woman (- isn't it always) arrives at the police station to report a missing racehorse and the investigation ensues.
Punta Secca Harbor: murder weapon?....or a fisherman's gutting knife.
     You can stay here - the house is a bed and breakfast guesthouse called La Casa di Montalbano (see below under Accommodation), It sits right on the beach in Piazzetta della Torre Scalambri in Punta Secca.
La Casa di Montalbano brochure: you can stay here
Opening credits: the Punta Secca lighthouse
Modica
     The scary looking high-rise viaduct in the opening credits is Ponte Guerrieri on highway 115 South West Sicula, just south of Modica town.

Ragusa
     Stand on the steps of the church of Santa Maria delle Scala, you'll picture Montalbano materialize any moment in the Piazza del Duomo below, where many street scenes are filmed in and around these baroque settings, ornate  balconies, high-arched doorways and the Church of San Giorgio.
     Also in the Piazza Duomo, we visited the neoclassical Circolo di Conversazione, founded as a male-only social club for the Ragusan gentry, and it's where Montalbano breaks in on the coroner Dottor Pasquano’s card game in The Scent of the Night episode.
Circolo di Conversazione:  founded as a male-only social club for the Ragusan gentry
     In Montalbano's Croquettes (an episode from the book Gli Arancini di Montalbano - alas, as yet, not translated to English) Salvo visits a cafe in Piazza Duomo to talk to his housekeeper's troublesome son.
     In another episode the public park in Ragusa Ibla, the Giardino Ibleo, dating from ​​in the mid-nineteenth century, stands in for a hospital garden.
     Not far from Ragusa is the Grotta delle Trabacche, a cave where, during excavations, both Roman and Byzantine graves were found. It was used was used in The Terracotta Dog episode as the place where Montalbano discovers a terracotta dog guarding a pair of long-dead corpses.
Marina di Ragusa: one of many sunny locations

Marina di Ragusa
     The Villa Criscione, described as a 'fortified farm's it is still the residence of the owners, Carmel and George Criscione and they have restored it as a complex for weddings, meetings, receptions and events including opera, concerts and plays. In The Shape of the Water it becames the home of the engineer Luparello, the character found dead in a car at the Pasture, a disreputable district - more on this later.
Villa Criscione Contrada Camemi, SP-25 Ragusa Marina di Ragusa www.villacriscione.it/

The Pasture
     In the first Montalbano book, The Shape of Water (1994), and the third of the RAI TV Montalbano programmes, a well respected engineer and local politician is found dead in his car, at the Pasture, an outdoor area portrayed as a sordid district known for prostitution and drug trafficking.There are no wounds, bruises, no signs of violence, so it is assumed that he died of natural causes in the course of some sexual shenanigans. The Pasture is at Pisciotto, just east of Sampieri, with the abandoned Fornace Penna, a brick making factory site that features in a couple of episodes.

Donnafugata Castle
     This 14th century castle, recently restored, is used as the home of elderly Mafia Don Balduccio Sinagra, the retired head of one of the two local Mafia families. He and Montalbano profess a trust in each other and meet from time to time to mull over the old days, matters of honor and what's happening locally. In Excursion to Tindari, Montalbano is juggling with two cases that might be related and is summoned here by Don Balduccio - it's an offer he can't refuse.
Donnafugata Castle: used as the home of elderly Mafia Don Balduccio Sinagra
     The castle's name Donnafugata, we were told, roughly translates as 'the fugitive or run-away woman,' a description that  might fit Queen Blanche of Navarre, widow of King Martin I of Aragon. It is said that she hid herself here from a Spanish condottiero (warlord) Count Bernardo Cabrera, who wanted to marry her and so secure leadership over Sicily.  The castle  eventually fell under siege by Cabrera, but, again, she managed to escape and hide again in the Steri Palace in Palermo.

Food
Arancini - In Gli Arancini di Montalbano (alas, as yet, not translated to English) Montalbano debates whether to leave Sicily and be with his girlfriend in Paris, or stay and eat his housekeeper Adelina’s arancini. Arancini is a famous Sicilian fried rice ball (containing meat and vegetables) coated with breadcrumbs
Cannoli - tube-shaped shells of deep-fried pastry dough with a sweet, creamy filling that usually contains ricotta.
Further HOLIDAYezine reading:
How to cook Arancini. Pat Keenan visited the Southern Sicilian province of Ragusa and tried his hand at cooking a local delicacy
http://holidayezine.blogspot.ie/2014/06/how-to-cook-arancini-pat-keenan-visited.html

Accommodations
Donnafugata
We stayed at Antica Locanda del Golf, Contrada Torre Piombo, 50122 Donnafugata Ragusa, Italy www.anticalocandadelgolf.it

Ragusa
We stayed at the Hotel Villa Carlotta, Via Ungaretti, 97100 Ragusa. www.villacarlottahotel.com/

Punta Secca
When the film crews are not shooting 'Inspector Montalbano, Salvo's house becomes a guesthouse called La Casa di Montalbano. www.lacasadimontalbano.com or www.discoveringsicily.com.

Marina di Ragusa
LaMoresca-maison de charme, Via Dandolo, Marina di Ragusa.‎
+39 0932 239495  www.lamorescahotel.it/

Eating out
Modica
We had lunch at the Don Eusebio Restaurant, Hotel Eremo della Giubiliana,
Now a 5 Star hotel, it dates from the 12th century, an old Arab fortress, a defense against  Barbary pirates in the Mediterranean. The Knights of Malta occupied it in the early 16th century.
Eremo della Giubiliana: a splendid 5 Star hotel, but in Montalbano they find a dead naked young woman
Eremo della Giubiliana: a splendid 5 Star hotel room
    In The Voice of the Violin, Montalbano finds a dead naked young woman in a splendid villa outside Vigata. Well, they wouldn't find a better splendid villa. The building also features in The Shape of Water episode
Hotel Eremo della Giubiliana,  C.da Giubiliana. 97100 Ragusa  www.eremodellagiubiliana.it/eng/index.html

Marina di Ragusa
We had lunch at Quattro Quarti-Ristorante Caffé Wine Bar, Via Augusta, 3, 97010 Marina di Ragusa  www.quattro-quarti.it/

Porto Empedocle
Salvo Montalbano likes to eat at the fictional Trattoria San Calogero In the books it was based on the Osteria al Timone Da Enzo, Via Garibaldi 11, 92014 Porto Empedocle.

Ragusa Ibla
In the TV series the fictional Trattoria San Calogero is really La Rusticana in Ragusa Ibla, where the cast of the TV series have signed photographs on the walls. It is where Montalbano introduces his colleague Mimi to his future wife Beba  in Excursion to Tindari .
La Rusticana, Corso XXV Aprile 68 Ragusa Ibla (tel. 0932/227981).
While staying at the Hotel Villa Carlotta, Via Ungaretti, 97100 Ragusa. www.villacarlottahotel.com/ , we had dinner at the 1 star Michelin Rated La Fenice Restaurant at the hotel. www.lafeniceristorante.com

Comiso
Before our flight home we had really tasty pizzas for lunch at Le Sale, Sala Centrale, Villa Orchidea Holel, Contrada Boscorotondo, Comiso-Vittoria Ragusa www.villaorchidea.it/index.php?v=l_en

Further HOLIDAYezine reading:
     Comiso in South East Sicily. Pat Keenan flew into a new airport, visited a charming town, admired some great artistic riches and had another encounter with dead monks http://holidayezine.blogspot.ie/2014/06/comiso-in-sicily-charming-town-new.html

Books by Andrea Camilleri
     This Italian TV detective drama is based on the novels and short stories of Sicilian writer Andrea Camilleri. Many of the books, now translated into English, are available from bookshops and online at www.amazon.co.uk  www.easons.com
   
To read in the order they were written:
1 The Shape of Water(1994)
2 The Terracotta Dog(1996)
3 The Snack Thief(1996)
4 The Voice of the Violin(1997)
5 Excursion to Tindari(2000)
6 The Smell of the Night(2001)
7 Rounding the Mark(2003)
8 The Patience of the Spider(2004)
9 The Paper Moon(2005)
10 August Heat(2006)
11 The Wings of the Sphinx(2006)
12 The Track of Sand(2007)
13 The Potters Field(2008)
14 The Age of Doubt(2008)
15 The Dance Of The Seagull(2009)
17 The Treasure Hunt(2010)

Travel File
I flew with Ryanair (www.ryanair.com) direct from Dublin to Comiso, in South East Sicily (Thursdays and Sundays) They also fly London Stansted direct to Comiso
Ryanair also fly Dublin direct to Palermo on Mondays and Thusdays

For Information on travels in Italy: 

For Information on travels in Sicily:
www.lowcostholidays.com/italy/sicily-holidays.htm

Armchair Travel; Sicily and China

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Armchair Travel
Montalbano visits Donnafugata Castle, Sicily
New series- Art of China 
      In an episode called Excursion to Tindari(Inspector Montalbano, 9:00pm BBC4 Saturday, July 26) Montalbano is juggling with two cases that might be related - a man is found murdered outside his apartment, and an elderly couple are reported missing on an excursion to the ancient site of Tindari, which is on the Gulf of Patti in the Province of Messina. During his investigations he is summoned to Donnafugata Castle, southeast Sicily, (this actual castle is used as the fictional home of elderly Mafia Don Balduccio Sinagra, the retired head of one of the two Mafia families in the fictional region of Montalusa.)- it's an offer he can't refuse. Also lookout for the fictional Trattoria San Calogero - it is actually La Rusticana in Ragusa Ibla, where the walls are covered by signed photographs of the  TV cast.  In Excursion to Tindari the restaurant is where Montalbano introduces his colleague Mimi to his future wife Beba.
     See also on HOLIDAYezine: Inspector Montalbano's Sicily- Pat Keenan visits the patch of Italy's best-loved policeman, visits his places of work, his beachside home and samples his favorite foods. http://holidayezine.blogspot.ie/2014/07/sicily-inspector-montalbanos-patch.html
Andrew Graham-Dixon in the Terracotta Army Museum                                                    Photo:BBC/Renegade Pictures
     Andrew Graham-Dixon travels across China by train, canal boat and even bicycle to show the rich heritage of art and culture in China.  In a three part series (Art of China, 9,00pm BBC4 Wednesday, July 30) he bravely hopes to cover Chinese art from 1,700 BC to the present day with a actual journey of finding a rich heredity of art in China.
     He will include some remarkable bronze sculptures made more than 3,000 years old, 7th century Buddhist frescoes and landscape paintings – including some by an Emperor of China. Andrew will also include a look at China’s current art scene.

Armchair Travel: The Stuarts, China, Peasants' Revolt in England, Sicily

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 Armchair Travel
Sat. Aug. 2    BBC2 N Ireland, 9.00pm : John Ball  encouraging Wat Tyler's rebels 

Dr Clare Jackson with helmet of Henry, Prince of Wales                                                                    Photo: BBC Scotland
The Stuarts: attempting to create a feeling of Britishness
The history of the 17th century British royal family in The Stuarts (BBC2 N Ireland 8.00pm Wednesday July 30) is explored by Clare Jackson. She explains the difficulties of ruling Ireland, England and Scotland, multiple religions and civil war. In this first episode, she looks at James VI of Scotland's attempts to unite his country with Ireland and England.
Terracotta Army Museum                                                                      Photo: BBC/Renegade Pictures
Strange masks:  four thousand years old
     The new series of Art of China continues (BBC4 9.00pm Wednesday July 30) as Andrew Graham-Dixon travels across China seeking out Chinese art and put it into a historical setting. In this episode, he finds some recent discoveries of ancient art that redefine China's own understanding of its past. There is an remarkable collection of futuristic and strange bronze masks created nearly four  thousand years ago. He travels the Yellow River to the tomb of a warrior empress and explains the origins of Chinese calligraphy.
     This is followed by a repeat of Wild China: Heart of the Dragon (BBC4 10.00pm Wednesday July 30) It explores how rural Chinese in the south have developed a relationship with the region's animals,including the use of water buffalo in farming, and how tamed cormorants help their owners while fishing

Peasants' Revolt, Kent, England:  shaped political thought for more than 600 years
     John Ball, a priest in the 14th-century came to despise the Church authorities and in turn they persecuted him. He joined forces with Wat Tyler in the county Kent in England in 1381 to lead the uprising that became known as the Peasants' Revolt. In the first of a two-part programme
Melvyn Bragg's Radical Lives: Now Is the Time - John Ball (BBC2 N Ireland, 9.00pm Saturday August 2) Bragg examines how the words of John Ball helped shape rebellions and political thought for more than 600 years

Montalbano: another visit to southeast Sicily
    In The Artist's Touch, (Inspector Montalbano, BBC4, 9.00pm. Saturday August 2) Goldsmith Alberto Larussa is found dead in his wheelchair, which has been modified into an electric chair. It looks like an elaborate suicide. But is it?. For Montalbano the case takes on a different view of the case when the dead man's will is deemed to be a forgery - and suspicion quickly falls on Larussa's brother Giacomo, who stands to inherit everything. Meanwhile, Deputy Inspector 'Mimi' Augello investigates the puzzling murder of an electrician. This episode is a script specially written for TV and is not taken from any of the detective novels of Andrea Camilleri.
Boxsets
Inspector Montalbano: TV Series One (5 Disc DVD) is available from www.amazon.co.uk  for approx. €29.57 / £23.39 sterling (exchange rates when blogged)


Armchair Travel: First World War, Libya's Gaddafi, Art of China

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Armchair Travel
The First World War Remembered
     This week, one hundred years ago, Germany had just declared war on Russia and France and followed up by invading neutral Belgium and Britain declared war on Germany. The First World War, the so-called 'war to end all wars' had begun. It didn't do that, but it did change the course of Ireland's history.
The Royal Irish Rifles in a communication trench during the Battle of the Somme, believed to be July 1, 1916. Photo:Imperial War Museums, London
     To examine this, The Forgotten War? Ireland and World War One (RTÉ One  10.35pm Tuesday, August 5), John Bowman hosts a discussion on why thousands of Irishmen inlisted to fight with the British army and examines the consequences of the war on the country. The 1916 Easter Rising coincided and then there those, at the time, who felt a hope that Irish Nationalists and Ulster Unionists fighting along side each other would promote the idea of home rule. The discussion includes Edward Madigan, Evelyn O'Rourke, Catriona Pennell, Paul Bew, Robert Ballagh, and also archived interviews with war veterans
     In the first of a two part documentary My Great War: Home By Christmas (RTÉ One 9.35pm Monday, August 4), descendants of Irish soldiers travel to Europe to hear stories of great-grandfathers, aunts and uncles who fought in the British Army during the First World War. Sean Malone tries to find out the truth about Sergeant Michael Curley, a relation who is said to have killed his own commanding officer while trying to save his comrades
     The second part the documentary My Great War: Hero to Traitor (RTÉ One 9.35pm Tuesday, August 5), more Irish relatives give accounts their ancestors' roles in the war. Mike Grey visits France, to find what caused his grandfather to suffer from shell-shock and Paul Conlon tells of the eight brothers in his family from Sligo who fought in the conflict and how his family coped when only four returned. Kerry Rooney tells her great-grandfather fighting at the Battle of the Somme and reflects on why as a Catholic he fought with a mainly Protestant division.
Michael Portillo at Poelcapelle British Cemetry.                                                         Photo: BBC/FremantleMedia UK/John Hall
     A new Michael Portillo railway series relating to the First World War begins, A Railway War Begins (BBC2 N Ireland 6.00pm Monday August 4 Continues Tuesday to Friday 6.30pm August 5 - 8). He travels through Britain and Europe examining the impact of railways - effecting how the war was fought and used to transport millions to the trenches. He visits Metz, France; Southampton, England; the north-east of England;  Hampshire; the south coast of England; Quintinshill, near Gretna Green, Scotland; Abancourt, northern France; Bristol's Temple Meads station; Ypres, Belgium.

Libya's Muammar Gaddafi
There are 2 documentaries about Libya's Muammar Gaddafi. First, a repeat showing of  Mad Dog: Gaddafi's Secret World - Storyville (BBC4 10.05pm Sunday August 3), looks at the private life of former Libyan leader Colonel Muammar Muhammad Abu Minyar al-Gaddafi, outlining his alarming abuse of power. Pieced together from the Pacific, Cuba, Brazil, the US, South Africa and Australia, the programme explains how Libya's huge oil reserves were the reason why he managed to both maintain such a strong alliance with the West finance terrorism, and finally ending with the Arab Spring that heralded his overthrow and death in August 2011
     Then there is Mad Dog - Inside the Secret World of Muammar Gaddafi (RTÉ One, 9.35pm Thursday August 7) This documentary takes us into the Libyan dictator's palace, at his cronies and courtiers, nuclear smugglers and a virgin suicide squad. the program moves from Brazil to Beirut to track down the men and women who worked for Gaddafi.
(Please note that since I have not seen either programme before, they might actually be the same programme using different titles)

The Golden Age of Art in China
     Andrew Graham-Dixon resumes his journey through China to the Yellow Mountains in Art of China (BBC4, 9.00pm Wednesday, August 6) He is on a quest to locate Chinese landscape painting from from the 10th to the 15th century(from the Song to the Ming dynasties) - the golden age of art in China.

Thomas Paine: a detail from
a painting by Auguste Millière
Champion of Democracy and Human Rights
     I enjoyed last weeks episode of Melvyn Bragg's Radical Lives on John Ball,  one of the leaders of the Peasant's Revolt in 14th-century England, and as he was also a persecuted priest I would add him to the list of precursors of the Reformation.
     This week he deals with the18th-century English radical Thomas Paine: Melvyn Bragg's Radical Lives: Rights of Man (BBC2 N Ireland 9.15pm Saturday August 9). Paine wrote three of the best regarded political books of all time - Common Sense, Rights of Man and The Age of Reason - they inspired the American Revolution. Paine was also an active contributor in the French Revolution and sought political reform in Britain. Bragg travels to Norfolk, England; Philadelphia and New York, USA; and Paris, France in the footsteps the great champions of democracy and human rights

On an Island off the Coast of Sicily
In this Inspector Montalbano episode, The Sense of Touch, (BBC4, 9.00pm Saturday August 9) we visit an island off the coast of Sicily where a blind man dies in what appears to be an accident. But events change as Montalbano finds the the man had recently deposited a sizable sum of money to his bank account and so begins an investigation into a supposedly charitable organisation. This story was tele scripted for TV based on the detective novels of Andrea Camilleri - but not from from any specific book

Article 11

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Puerto de Mogan - Little Venice
Louise Coughlan and family returned to Gran Canaria and stayed B&B style

Photos: Louise Coughlan


     Nestled in the hills, The Cordial Mogan Vallee apartments have spectacular views and with three swimming pools, there is plenty of choice.  With an ideal yearly temperature of approximately 24 degrees, Gran Canaria is recommended for those seeking sunshine even in the winter.  Beach worshippers will love the soft golden sand and the lukewarm water.  Partly shaded, the beach in Mogan is also ideal for families and we loved nothing better than to take a dip in the sea to cool down after a stroll around the many cafes and restaurants.
Action packed with shows
     Mogan port is called Little Venice as it hosts pretty bridges and canals with picturesque apartments surrounding it. Gran Canarians take pride in the appearance of this quaint fishing village which you can see by the many colourful hanging baskets on display.  Basil’s restaurant (www.basilsbistro.net) in the square serves the best seafood - their paella is superb.  Don’t forget to try the very refreshing ice-cream from Bar Marina.
     Every Friday a market is held in Mogan selling everything from clothes to shoes to bags, belts and also Aloe Vera lotion made from from the "hand filleted" leaves of aloe vera harvested on the island.          We purchased a Ronaldo outfit for a bargain after haggling with the marketers.
     With many excursions on offer, and as we had been to Aqualand and Palmitos Park, we headed to the Wild West theme park called Sioux City that has been created in the remains of an old spaghetti-western style film set.  This one horse town hosts a church, bank, re-created saloons, prison, sheriff’s office and a bar where we watched a staged brawl . Action packed with shows such as knife-throwing, pistol-shooting, lassoing and a bank robbery.  Sioux City is well worth a visit.

     Dining al fresco was another option for us at our beautiful apartments - we ordered a take-away at the local café of wrinkly potatoes (papas arrrugadas) with the famous moja sauce, rotisserie chicken and salad washed down with our favourite bottle of Rioja.
     The nightly entertainment in Hotel Cordial was excellent with plenty to do for old and young alike.
     With so much of the island to explore, I hope to return to Gran Canaria very soon.

Fact file:
www.donabatetravel.ie
Louise booked with Donabate Travel who organised her return flights, accommodation and transfers. Log onto www.donabatetravel.ie - contact David
www.sunway.ie
Sunway Holidays also organise holidays to Gran Canaria and the Canary Islands. Log onto www.sunway.ie -contact Michelle
Contact direct for the hotel is www.cordialcanarias.com

Some more pictures:

CANTABRIA- an alternative Spain

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Cantabria - an alternative Spain 
Pat Keenan takes us on
a 10 stop tour of the essential Cantabria

Photos: Pat Keenan


                                                                                                                                             Map: HOLIDAYezine
     The rain in Spain falls mainly.... in the north west, from Galicia to Asturias, Cantabria and to the Basque Country and Catalonia. That's why the area is known as España Verde, Green Spain. It turns to snow high up on the Picos de Europa Mountains and below it nurtures lush verdant valleys, and in the process we have a different and alternative Spain.
     We arrived from Dublin direct into Santander Airport and from there we set off to find the essence of Cantabria. Renfe, the national rail carrier is largely an inter-city affair, so not really much help. The local Feve train will take you from Santander along the coast to Galicia. But we wanted to explore the heart of Cantabria, the Picos mountains and valleys, wildlife parks, caves and villages, unchanged by time. The hardy could walk, if in the possession of a stout pair of legs and lots of time or they could cycle. But ideally, hire a car at the airport. (see Travel File below) 
1  Santander Airport
     Ryanair (www.ryanair.com) fly direct from Dublin to Santander Airport, just 5km from the city of Santander  and there is a bus every 30 minutes. 
2  The Altamira Caves
Museo de Altamira
leaflet guide
     Some of the best pre-historic paintings in the world are at the Altamira caves just  2km from the lovely village of Santillana del Mar.
     The cave's drawings were discovered in 1879 by eight year-old María Sanz de Sautuola when she pointed them out to her amateur archaeologist father Marcelino.  On entering the cave it immediately struck me that they looked so modern and later when I came across the masks I immediately thought - Picasso.
María Sanz de Sautuola
   So I was not at all surprised to learn that the original discovery was met by accusations of fakery and allegations that Marcelino had them forged. These charges still lingered on until 1902 when new findings of cave paintings were found. Far from being modern, researchers using uranium-thorium dating found that the paintings were completed over a period of 20 thousand years and even more recently, further uranium-thorium dating research suggests that one image is 35,600 years old. Maybe the Picasso masks are the forgery. Now, the cave with its paintings are a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
      Access to the cave of Altamira, since 2002, has been restricted to a small number conservationists and the general public is no longer admitted. Scientific experts became aware that exposure to carbon dioxide in the breath of the large number of visitors was endangering the Palaeolithic cave paintings. The cave you will visit is a replica cave, albeit an excellent full scale one, attached to the museum. (http://en.museodealtamira.mcu.es)

3 Santillana del Mar
     Santillana del Mar is known as the town of three lies. Well yes and no, 'del Mar' - yes, the sea is not that close, so a lie, 'illana' - meaning flat,  and it is far from flat, so lie 2. The third lie is said to be 'Santa' because the town has no saint. But wait, what about Saint Juliana, the local patron, whose bones are kept in La Colegiata, the Romanesque 12th-century church, at the very centre of  town, so let's say the jury is out on that.
Santillana del Mar
Santillana del Mar shops:
bags of them
     There are many tales about Juliana, here, she was a chaste Spanish lady who was married off to a Turk and tortured to death for not giving up her virginity and for not renouncing her faith and thus became a Christian martyr. Another version is that she lived in the city of Nicomedia in Bythinia (now in Turkey) and was raised as a nice pagan Africanus girl, who became a Christian, much to the heartbreak of her father, He promised her in marriage to a Roman Senator Eleusius, who had nothing but contempt for her faith and even less for chastity. This all happened about 305AD so the story is uncertain. It is variously said, that she burned in flames; that she was plunged into a boiling cauldron of oil; that she was beheaded. It all took place in Nicomedia, Turkey; or in Naples, perhaps Cumae, where her relics are also said to be enshrined. The Colegiata can be visited every day apart from Mondays, from 10am-1.30pm and 4pm-6.30pm. Tickets cost 3 euros.
     But, for all that, it is an enchanting town of narrow cobbled streets , wide squares, the medieval homes of noblemen and their grand coats of arms. The town is almost entirely pedestrianized. I say almost because some locals are permitted to use their cars. So if you don't altogether trust Spanish drivers, this is the town for you.
     For those with a strong stomach there is also a Museo de la Tortura (the Museum of the Inquisition), containing their instruments of torture. You won't miss it - you'll  easily spot the skeleton hanging in a cage over a garden wall.
4  Cabárceno Nature Park
     The brown bears in natural park of Cabárceno made me think of Myles na gCopaleen's notion that men and their bicycles eventually merge. The park, 15 kilometres (9.3 mi) from Santander, is a reclaimed 750 hectares (1,900 acres) of open pit iron mining, dating way back to Roman times and, while now all lushly green, the iron gives the rocks and soil a rusty brown hue. The brown bears have acquired the same rusty colour.
     These Brown Bears, their proper name: Ursus Arctos Arctos, are under high risk of extinction in Spain and Europe, and there are only some of them left in the mountains of Cantabria and Asturias, and a few more  in the Pyrinees. In Cabarceno we, locked into a Range Rover, ventured through double security park gates into their mountainy domain.
    Ahead of us another 4X4 dispensed large chunks of meat and full length baguettes out the back through well armored shoot and the bears came down the hills in what can only be described as a stampede. They grab, snarl, run, chase, hide, fight. Survival of the biggest and fittest. And speaking of survival, during all this commotion, one pair brazenly made love.
5  Fuente Dé
     Part of the joy of traveling around Cantabria is, just about everything is easy reach. The cities, the sea and beaches, places of culture and pilgrimage, lush green countryside, and then, in the Picos de Europa National Park, is one of the most amazing and spectacular mountain wildernesses in Europe.
     Just for a sampler we took the Fuente De, the third-largest cable-car system in the world to the giddy heights of the viewing point, 1,850m (6,000 ft.) above sea level and from there, staying power and fitness allowing, you can climb (some would call it a steep walk) further up the rocky mountainside with small patches of snow, even in summer. In winter this would be fully snow covered. Don't be put off by the more experienced as they literally run past. Every year they hold what's known as vertical racing or mountain running. These runs range from 5 to 30 kilometres from ground zero to 100 and 3000 metros.
      But even by just using the cable car to the viewing point will afford a mountaineer experience and then dare you step out on the see through mesh floor of the viewing platform and admire the view below, 1,850m under your feet, a sweeping view through the valley. Ignore the calls of "don't look down"
Driving high on the Picos de Europa: and yes, that's snow

6  Liébana
Pan Con Tomate at La Casona de Cosgaya, Liébana
     We were impress with our overnight stay at La Casona de Cosgaya (www.casonadecosgaya.com) in Liébana. It turned out be be a comfortable a rustic 15th-century house in the Picos de Europa mountains. In the morning I just happened to mention my favourite Spanish breakfast, Pan Con Tomate, and they specially made it for me. One of the personal touches that make travel worthwhile. HOLIDAYezine Highly Recommended
7  Mogrovejo
We visited an old school at Mogrovejo, a small village nestled against a scenic mountain backdrop of the Picos de Europa range.
The old school museum at Mogrovejo
     Almost Alpine looking, the village is made up of quaint red roofed stone brick houses with distinct ironwork and wood balconies, and looks like it has never changed since it was built between the 16th and18th centuries. The small Church of Our Lady of the Assumption has all the appearances of an indianos building. Indianos is a term used for the thousands of Spaniards who emigrated to the American colonies and the many who made fortunes returned to build schools, churches in their villages back home, usually in a style picked up on their travels.
Mogrovejo: the small church
Relic from Calvary cross
     Overlooking the town, the tower of Pedro Ruiz de Mogrovejo, currently empty inside, is thought to date from the late 13th century.
8  Santo Toribio
     The Monastery of Santo Toribio de Liébana in the Cantabrian Mountains is one of the five place (the others are Rome, Jerusalem, Santiago de Compostela Caravaca de la Cruz) that Roman Catholics believe have 'the privilege of perpetual indulgences'.
     A tabernacle displays what is believed to be the largest piece of wood from the cross upon which Christ was crucified. It is the left-hand (literally) part of the horizontal beam complete with nail hole. Originally unearthed in Jerusalem, it was taken here in the fifth century.
     In the sixteenth century it was forged into a cross itself and inserted into a glass fronted silver gilted ornate case, the base of which has an opening so that pilgrims, on their way to Santiago de Compostela, could kiss the exposed wood.
     The Forestry Research Institute in Madrid, examined a sample of the relic in 1958 found it to be Mediterranean Cypress wood, common to Palestine and that it might date older than 2,000 years. The last time I was here in 2012, a very helpful Fannciscan monk kindly removed the revered cross from the altar showcase for us to examine up close.
9  Potes
     The picturesque market town of Potes in the Liebana valley is where the rivers Quiviesa and Deva join after their decent from the heights of the Picos de Europa. The town has the lowest rainfall in Cantabria, indeed bounded by a circle of mountains it enjoys a Mediterranean type microclimate suitable for cultivating walnuts, vine and from from grape skins they distill a drink called Marc  (not unlike grappa in Italy or orujo in the rest of Cantabria) except here they might add sweeteners, herbs or spices like cinnamon. Don't leave without trying the heartiest of stews like Pote Liebanés or Cocido Montanés, chickpeas or white beans and a good helping of meat. Wash it all down with some wine or locally made cider.
10  Santander
 Santander is the port city capital, a name probably most known for the huge banking group that originated here. Ships sail right up to the edge of town, they always have and in Spain's era of discovery they arrived back here with all that South American - Caribbean  bounty, which no doubt explains apparent affluence and the rich banking connection.
   It's right on the seafront, makes a reviving morning walk or a revitalizing evening one. It is not a big city so getting around on foot is easy and a tapas bar crawl is a wonderful and sometimes surprising way to spend an evening - I'll say no more, enjoy!
      The 2014 ISAF Sailing World Championships will be hosted by Santander - September 8 - 21, 2014. Over 1,400 sailors and more than 1,000 boats representing 80 nations are expected to attend.
The events sailed and the equipment used in 2014 will be those selected for the 2016 Olympic Sailing Competition. www.sailing.org/2014-ISAF-Worlds.php

Travel File
Ryanair (www.ryanair.com) fly direct from Dublin to Santander Airport, just 5km from the city of Santander  and there is a bus every 30 minutes.

Where to stay
Picos de Europa: 
La Casona de Cosgaya, Liébana (www.casonadecosgaya.com)  a small 13 room hotel in a rustic15th-century house in the Picos de Europa mountains
Santander:
Hotel Santemar: just a few minutes from the long El Sardinero beach and close to Magdalena, the ancient residence of King Alfonso XIII.
Hotel Santemar, Calle Joaquín Costa, 28, 39005 Santander. www.hotelsantemar.com/en

Where to eat 
Picos de Europa:
The Asador Llorente Restaurant C/ San Roque, 1, Planta
39570 Potes - Liébana. Cantabria  www.liebanaypicosdeeuropa.com
Santander: 
Restaurante El Serbal (The Rowan), Calle de Andrés del Río, 7, 39004 Santander, affordable Michelin Star dining ask about their tasting menu, or from the a la carte you could try grilled asparagus with prawns and cockles, beef tenderloin with foie gras ravioli. There is a choice of wonderful home-made breads, and then there's the the 300-plus wine list.  www.elserbal.com
 At Posada del Club de Calidad: Quesada Pasiega 
(pudding, typical of Cantabria).
     My favorite tapas experience was at Hijas de Florencio (Las), Santander. 23 Paseo de Pereda, Santander 39004. There's a great buzz about this atmospheric tapas bar, converted from a carpenter's shop, it has become a favorite with Santander locals for good wine, coffee and hearty tapas, like morcilla (black pudding), chorizo, ham, cecina(dark smoked beef) and cured pork loin.

For more about Cantabria:
www.turismodecantabria.com
www.cantur.com
www.turismocomillas.com

Car Hire online or at Santander Airport
Avis, www.avis.ie/CarHire/Europe/Spain/Santander/Santander-Parayas-Airport
Eurocar, www.europcar.ie/car-hire-SPAIN-SANTANDER.html
Hertz, www.hertz.ie/rentacar/misc/index.jsp?targetPage=IE_Car_Hire_Santander.jsp

Armchair Travel: VIENNA, PARIS, NEW YORK

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 Armchair Travel
James Fox in New York                                                                                          Photo: BBC/Clare Tavernor

James Fox in Harry’s Bar, Paris.                                                                                             Photo: BBC/Nathalie Biancheri
James Fox in front of Gustav Klimt's Kiss at the Belvedere, Vienna.                                        Photo: BBC/Helen Shariatmadari
     A new three part series begins, Bright Lights, Brilliant Minds: A Tale of Three Cities (BBC4 9.00pm Wednesday 20), with Dr James Fox visiting three cities and looks at artists, thinkers, writers and musicians that changed the ways we understand our world. This first episode takes on Vienna in 1908, the year Gustav Klimt painted The Kiss, Sigmund Freud uncovered the Oedipus complex, Egon Schiele, a major figurative painter, produced pictures of startling intensity.
Music and architecture too, also took radical new directions. It was also the year another artist, who would devastate Europe, arrived in the city... a young Adolf Hitler

Dr James Fox continues with stories of three cities where artists, thinkers, writers and musicians create new directions. This week in Bright Lights, Brilliant Minds: A Tale of Three Cities (BBC4 9,00pm. Wednesday August 27) it is the Paris of 1928, the First World War is over and everyone yearns of a better life and a new beginning. It was the year artist Salvador Dali, René Magritte and film-maker Luis Bunuel brought their eccentric and strange new perceptions to the city, Writers from Ireland James Joyce, from America, Ernest Hemingway, and musicians, George Gershwin and Cole Porter came to explore a decade of renewed creativity and freedom. Black artists like Josephine Baker arrived to enjoy a world without prejudice.

In the final part of  Bright Lights, Brilliant Minds: A Tale of Three Cities (BBC4 9,00pm. Wednesday September 3) Dr James Fox visits New York, the city of 1951 New York City when jazz spawned 'bebop', Jackson Pollock dripped and stippled new dynamism to American painting. Jack Kerouac defined the `beat generation' with his book On the Road, and a young Marlon Brando has an Oscar-winning performances as Terry Malloy in On the Waterfront, and David Ogilvy introduced the real 'Mad Men' to advertising.

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Celebrating Seamus Heaney 
On Home Ground 
September 11-14 

     As the first anniversary of the death of Seamus Heaney approaches, the Northern Ireland Tourist Board (NITB) have kindly supplied us with some of the ways people can celebrate the life and works of Seamus Heaney.
    Clare McCoy, NITB’s south of the border PR Officer, says: “Northern Ireland has a world-renowned reputation in poetry and prose,which in addition to Heaney also includes CS Lewis and Samuel Beckett, and if you enjoy reading and losing yourself in a good book, writing poetry or experiencing the magic of where some of the world’s finest stories, and poetry comes from, then look no further than Northern Ireland.”

Plans for a Seamus Heaney Interpretive Centre
    There are exciting plans to preserve the legacy Seamus Heaney left behind including a new centre to commemorate him in his native Bellaghy. The Seamus Heaney Interpretive Centre will include exhibition areas, library, arts studio and an amphitheatre.
Laurel Villa Guest House (Seamus Heaney Exhibition)
Laurel Villa Tours of Seamus Heaney Country
     The tour begins at Laurel Villa Townhouse in Magherafelt, (www.laurel-villa.com/) Ireland’s only poetry guesthouse, where there is an exhibition with rare Heaney memorabilia  and special editions of his work. The Northern Ireland Tourist Board (NITB) have rated this five-star experience under a new NITB quality grading scheme, visitors have the opportunity to see his birthplace at Mossbawn and retrace the footsteps of the young Seamus Heaney on his way to school in the 1940s.
      The tour will bring people to places synonymous with Seamus Heaney, including the villages of Castledawson, Toome and his final resting place in Bellaghy. Along the way there is the chance to visit The Turf Man, a life-size representation of Nobel Laureate Seamus Heaney's most famous poem Digging as well as a number of key places from the poet's 'first world' that were to provide the inspiration for much of his work.

Seamus Heaney On Home Ground, September 11-14
     Celebrating Seamus Heaney On Home Ground, from September 11 – 14, will include poetry readings, children's workshops, a selection of films by the BBC (originally presented by Seamus Heaney) and coach tours of the Heaney country.

A Horticulturally Inspired Trail
On Thursday September 11 at Laurel Villa, Magherafelt (daily from 10am) the festival opens with a horticulturally inspired trail by Jean Bleakney entitled, Poetry Trail - From Boortree To Anemone.  Take a stroll in the garden of Laurel Villa and you will find a trail of poems placed alongside plants to which they are linked by name or association.

Creative Writing Workshops
Also on Thursday September 11 at Laurel Villa, Magherafelt, The Verbal Arts Centre, together with a team of creative writers, will host creative writing workshops aimed at various ages.  The workshops will encourage participants to gain a greater understanding of how to structure and develop their own poetry.
The dining room at Laurel Villa Guest House
Once Upon A Place  - for children and teens
On Friday September 12 at Laurel Villa, Magherafelt at 10.30am, Eoin Colfer the laureate Na nÓG and best-selling author of books for children and teens, including the Artemis Fowl series, Half Moon Investigations and the Wish List, launches Once Upon A Place.  Once Upon A Place will be a memorable storytelling event that will spark children's imaginations and bring the magic of story and of books to young people in an experiential way. Later that day Eoin will be in conversation with celebrated children’s author and artist Oliver Jeffers

My Heaney
My Heaney on Saturday September 13 at Laurel Villa, Magherafelt at 1pm will include a  series of well known journalists, writers and musicians (including Seamus McKee, travel writer Christopher Somerville and  Belfast Telegraph political Editor Liam Clarke) all of whom  will personally select their favourite Heaney poems and reveal how Heaney’s work helped to shape them.

Earth to Alice - Stand-up Poetry 
Alice McCullough will be at Laurel Villa on Saturday September 13 at 12 noon, admission £5.  Join Alice and experience this captivating new voice that has been delighting audiences as she plays with the boundaries between spoken word, stand-up, storytelling and theatre in her one-woman show 'Earth To Alice'.

Heaney and the Eaten Word - A cookery demonstration
On Sunday September 14 at Laurel Villa, Magherafelt at 2pm, admission £10, popular chef, teacher and broadcaster Paula McIntyre brings her culinary skills to Seamus Heaney's poetry in a bespoke cookery demonstration.  Heaney and the Eaten Word - A cookery demonstration with Paula McIntyre will feature everything from sloe gin, blackberries & buttermilk to perch, salmon & oysters.

For information on literary experiences 
or great places to enjoy a short break in Co Derry~Londonderry  
contact the Northern Ireland Tourist Board on Callsave 1850 230 230 or view on www.discovernorthernireland.com/literature

UPDATE OFFER
September 2014
NORTHERN IRELAND TOURIST BOARD 
OFFER OF THE WEEK
CELEBRATING SEAMUS HEANEY 
ON HOME GROUND
2 nights B&B in the Greenvale Hotel, 
Cookstown, Co Tyrone from £90 per person

     Why not turn this into a short break and avail of the Northern Ireland Tourist Board’s (NITB) special accommodation offer at the Greenvale Hotel, Cookstown, Co. Tyrone which includes 2 nights B&B from only £90 per person. (subject to availability)

For further information 
contact the Northern Ireland Tourist Board 
on Callsave 1850 230 230 

CATALONIA: the magic and the rich history

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A Journey Around Hidden Catalonia 
From medieval times in the rough bastion of monks 
to the luxury of some remarkable hotels, 
Isabel Conway enjoyed the magic 
and rich history of Spain
Aiguablava view from my Paradore: built on cliffs jutting out into the Mediterranean
     What would the monks of Montserrat have thought had they witnessed us drinking a mid morning fountain of Malvasia sweet wine poured from the traditional porron bottle with its long, spouted neck on our way to their monastery? God only knows!
     Back in medieval days the monks of Sant Pere de Casserres had a remarkably laid back attitude to alcohol consumption, I later discover. “It isn’t recommended that monks drink more than 5 litres (of wine) a day” the rule book for their Abbey decreed. For the record, each monk here in this 11th century Catalan bastion of Cluny received a guaranteed daily wine allowance of one litre.
     “That was the only way to stay warm in winter, they drank their wine warm but it surely kept them happy also”, chuckles our knowledgeable local guide Oriol Montero.
     We follow a rough stony pathway to reach the chapter house of the abbey, planned more than 1,000 years ago that took a hundred years to construct, towering over a bend of the Ter river. Here only young monks were allowed to eat meat (from two legged animals that somehow included rabbit...rules could be slightly re-arranged!) at Sant Pere de Casserres.
     A Monk’s day started with prayers at 2am. New entrants –traditionally the second sons of noble families (the first son having inherited the estates while the third usually became a Knight) knocked at the abbey gate and sat down to wait, often up to a week. So, you could say, vocations were well and truly tested before aspiring novices were admitted, to spend the rest of their lives in prayer, contemplation and onerous work, removed from the outside world.
     The medieval drinking habits of these monks was just one little ‘gem’ among many during my short exploration of the real Catalonia, one that is often hidden away but so worth the hunt just when the autumn leaves were turning gold in these parts and the November sun glinted but with diminishing power.
From Montserrat: the view over the countryside

Hotels in remarkable buildings and locations
     Our four day tour took in the unique state run hotels situated in remarkable buildings and locations called paradores in different parts of Catalonia. The beautiful surprising city of Girona on our last evening was the jewel in the crown. We also discovered stunning seaside towns like Aiguablava, the hilly mysterious village of Begur and Figueres, the last train stop before the French border and birthplace of Salvador Dali. In between we skirted the edges of national parks and explored the depths of the salt mountain at Cardona.
     I am of that generation which caught our first sunburn on the crowded sands and around  hotel pool sides of Lloret de Mar on the Costa Brava back in those early eighties youthful fun filled evenings of loud disco music and jugs overflowing with Sangria.
     My memories are of touring boulevards lined with ‘English breakfast’ boards and loud flashy discos, oblivious of a spectacular coastline on the doorstep where the land grows rocky, reckless and elemental,ignorant of the gastronomic delight of tapas, delicious seafood and much more.
An hour after arrival in Barcelona our bus is labouring upwards and the weirdly shaped crags of rock at Montserrat, one of the most spectacular of all Spain’s natural sights startlingly appear. Perched on a hairpin incline Montserrat has views on a clear day down to the Costa Brava on the front side and at the rear in the far distance the snow capped Pyrenees hug the horizon.
World famous boys choir: L'Escolania at Montserrat monastery
Cherubic angels and extraordinarily pure voices
     The oldest music school in Europe nurtures the talents of world famous choir L’Escolania within Montserrat monastery. The young boy sopranos look like cherubic angels in their white as snow surplices.
The church is crowded for the 1pm performance of the choir and soon their extraordinarily pure voices rise up above the nave. But it is for La Moreneta (the Black Virgin) that most come, forming long queues to mount the staircase to kiss the icon. Second only to Santiago de Compostela as a place of pilgrimage, the Black Virgin is an enduring symbol of Catalunya, independence, resilience and pride. She has been credited with countless miracles throughout the years.
     On another short pilgrimage, a night Porter points me in the general direction of the haunted wing of the Parador de Cardona, 80 kms from Barcelona where we spend the night. Staircases of time worn  stone and confusing corridors beckon. My late night ghost hunt eventually ends in a shadowy court yard   the centre point of a maze of floors and dead ends without a sighting. Doomed beautiful young maiden Adales  was banished by her father to a prison wing of the castle to separate her from an unsuitable lover centuries ago. She died in her turret of a broken heart and both staff and guests, not to mention ghost busters have reported sightings of her.
Montserrat: one of the most spectacular of Spain's natural sights

97 Luxury Paradors
     There are 97 Paradors  – a network of state run luxury hotels - spread across Spain, created back in 1928 with the twofold purpose of enhancing tourism and at the same time preserving buildings of national and artistic heritage. Some were abandoned medieval castles, palaces, Moorish Forts  and monasteries.
     Restored to their former glory these monuments possess the comforts of the 21st Century, yet allow you to experience the magic and rich history of Spain.
     Castle-Paradore Cardona, a imposing 9th century castle overlooks the  little town of the same name and was the last Catalan stronghold to fall to the Bourbons in the war of the Spanish Succession. The castle is still recognised as an emblem to Catalan nationalism. Slapped against steep hills with moats and turrets it oversees a huge salt mine exploited since Roman times and still working.
     The salt mine with extraordinary natural sculptures of salt inside are also a tourist attraction and you can explore a fraction of the 300 kms of galleries, some bigger than a couple of football fields put together.
     In the foothills of the Pyrenees, an hour’s drive inland from Barcelona and near the provincial city of Vic we discover a contrasting paradore, this one modelled on a 19th century Catalan mansion. Paradore de Vic-Sau stands serene above a lake hiding a ancient Bell tower that re-emerges in times of drought.
     Vic, the provincial nearby city, reached via forested twisting back roads, offers a mix of antiquity, a notable cathedral with an  Episcopal museum crammed with Romanesque and Gothic Catalan treasures. The main square is decorated with frescoes and lined with restored Romanesque buildings while old cobbled pedestrian streets of tempting little food shops offer all manner of regional produce.
     My favourite Paradore during this long weekend packed with surprises was romantic Aiguablava built on cliffs jutting out into the Mediterranean with only seabirds for company. The hotel’s location is amazing and notices forbid walkers from venturing down pathways eaten away by erosion with a dizzying drop in front. The rain was beating down but I could not resist taking a long stairway down to a secluded golden stretch of golden sand.
     Sadly it was our last evening, we had a plane to catch and only had time for a lightening tour of Girona, the city the Romans called Gerunda. By-passed by foreign visitors – much as Malaga used to be – in their rush to the Costas too often in the past thankfully people are waking up to Girona’s charms at last.
     This interesting friendly city, easily walked with lovely restaurants, tapa bars and cafes, less than  and an hour and a half by bus or train from Barcelona, stands on a fortress like hill high above the river Onyar.
Girona lost none of its mystery as we battled our way over footbridges peering at shadowy medieval buildings by slippery stairways in pouring rain. From Roman remains to Arab influences and then the Carrer de la Forca, its wet cobbles glistening, maze like laneways leading towards a Jewish  heartland  of the past it felt like being inside a living museum full of architectural treasures.
     All we lacked was the comfort of that porron pitcher filled with Malvasia, the local sweet wine.!

Fact files
Aer Lingus (www.aerlingus.com) fly to Barcelona daily. MAP Travel, 36 Upper O’Connell Street Dublin  01-8783111, (www.maptravel.ie) are the official Ireland representative for the unique Paradors network , offering expert advice. They book accommodation  and holidays from wine routes to world heritage cities routes, and pilgrim paths to a la carte options.
Overnight rates vary. Expect to pay between €70 and €110 per person per night for luxury accommodation including a substantial buffet breakfast featuring dozens of hot and cold breakfast tapas.

For further information 
www.costabrava.org
www.spain.info
Theatre Museum Salvador Dali: the artist is interred beneath the floor close to his Cadillac

Sights 
     Explore the rocky coast, sandy coves, lush plains and mountain scenery. Girona with a fine medieval centre is often overlooked by tourists. Begur and Palamos, contrasting coastal towns north of Lloret  de Mar are hidden gems. Begur is known for the elaborate mansions built by locals who made their fortunes in Cuba and Latin America. Palamos draws on its reputation as a important commercial  fishing port.  Next to the wharf side fish auction a leading Catalan cook Lluis Planas (www.espaidelpeix.org) champions less well known fish with cooking demonstrations and classes and participants eat the fruits of their labours afterwards. Figueres on the northernmost stretch of the Costa Brava is home to zangy Theatre-Museum Salvador Dali. The artist is interred beneath the floor close to his Cadillac, awash with water on the inside, among the renowned exhibits.
A mid morning snack of almonds, plump raisons and Malvasia swee wine at Montserrat 
Breakfast taps at Castle Paradore Cardona Catalonia

The Food 
Cal Sastre Restaurant (www.calsastre.com)  tucked away in the medieval village of Santa Pau, is worth a trek across the volcanic foothills of the Garroxta national park just for its famed   cannelloni stuffed duck with truffle cream sauce. We enjoyed   delicious tapas everywhere, notably Cardona and Aiguablava Paradores. Be sure also to take a detour to Vic for lunch at the belle époque CA L’U on Carrer de la Riera, 25 where time stands still and prices for beautifully prepared cuisine are cheap by top Irish restaurant standards.

NORDIC NOIR Ystad SWEDEN

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A Train trip to Sweden 
and Murder
With Chief Inspector Kurt Wallander, now sadly retired 
with an early-onset of Alzheimer's, 
Pat Keenan revisits his criminally inspired 
trip to Ystad, Sweden
Kurt Wallander: Krister Henriksson in one Swedish series
If you missed it on TV, 
The Bridge is available on DVD
    I was in Copenhagen, with a criminal goal, tracking down that city's part in the remarkable phoenomenon known as 'Nordic Noir' - a rash of dark crime drama in TV, film and books from the Scandanavain countries. Having immersed myself with 'The Killing' TV series I quietly boarded a train to Sweden's third most populous city, Malmo. It took only 35 minutes to cross the famous Oresund Bridge. Even travelling the bridge took on a whole new notoriety with another TV drama, The Bridge, involving police from both Copenhagen and Malmo. Exactly midway on the bridge a severed body is found. But complications arrise as half the body is in Denmark and the other half's in Sweden. So my train took me past a TV murder location. I saw nothing, officer ! Honest !
   
I reached Malmo safely, and boarded a second train, one hour and 55k(34 miles) to Ystad, a seaside port town with more than it's fair share of fictional murders and home to it's most famous resident the fictional Chief Inspector Kurt Wallander, the creation of best-selling author Henning Mankell, 
    In the BBC series Wallander is Kenneth Branagh and on Swedish SVT(also shown on BBC) he's been played by Rolf Lassgard and Krister Henriksson. Altogether about 50 films based on Mankell's novels have been shot on location here, so no wonder the towns tourism is now largely Wallander-based.



View Malmo and Ystad in a larger map
Ystad Station
     Alighting from the train at Ystad Station (which looks awfully like the red-stoned police station in some of the films) I find myself at the location where in 'Sidetracked' a scalped body was found under a tarpaulin covering a hole in the road. Undaunted, I continued across the small square to the tourist office to pick up my 'In the Footsteps of Wallander' booklet with maps and locations. From the steps of the tourist office I spot Fridolf’s Konditori, Wallander’s favourite cafe, where he regularly has coffee, sometimes a herring sandwich. But that turned out to be a red herring, there were none, so I settled for tuna sandwich.
Kurt Wallander: Kenneth Branagh in the BBC series


Fridolf’s Konditori: Wallander’s favourite cafe
ATM on Stortorget: in 'Firewall', guns blazing
    I needed some Swedish krona so I made my way to the ATM on Stortorget, the town's main market square where in 'Firewall', guns blazing, Wallander has to fight for his life by this ATM to prevent the collapse of the world economy (...was it all in vain?). Also, in this very square, in the film "Revenge",  police have to break up a a dangerously escalating demonstration outside in the Old Town Hall. 
Town Hall:dangerously escalating demonstrations


    The square also has a number of fine restaurants including: Lotta’s Restaurant where Wallander treats forensic examiner Nyberg to dinner in "One Step Behind'... Nyberg ends up paying. Le Cardinal, a pizzeria, where Wallander and his estranged daughter Linda try to come to terms with their relationship. Nearby is  the restaurant Bröderna, another favourite haunt of Wallander’s. He goes here to voice his thoughts with Istvan, the restaurant owner. However, be forewarned, in 'Firewall'  two young girls order a taxi from this restaurant – a journey that ends in murder.
Lotta’s Restaurant 
Le Cardinal pizzeria
Restaurant Bröderna: in 'Firewall' a taxi from here ends in murder
    If staying overnight choose the Hotel Continental, Sweden’s oldest hotel - it opened in 1829, and its restaurant is another of  Wallander’s favourites - it's here that he takes his daughter Linda when ever they need to celebrate something. The hotel also features in 'One Step Behind' where detective's colleagues Ann- Britt Hsglund and Martinsson dress up as waiters to foil a murderer, and in 'The African'  where the murder victim is a hotel guest. Avid fans can book dinner at Wallander’s usual table under a fine crystal chandelier.
Hotel Continental: in 'The African' the murder victim is a hotel guest
In 'Revenge' a controversial politician is shot dead here in Ystad's oldest half timbered house
Mariagatan: where Inspector Kurt Wallander lives
    There are few streets in Sweden that have awakened as much interest as Mariagatan in Ystad - remarkably  made famous by a fictitious character. It is where Inspector Kurt Wallander lives, his blue Peugeot would be parked outside and music from an opera, sometimes jazz, would waft through his apartment windows. The first thirteen Wallander films staring Krister Henriksson were filmed on Mariagatan just as it is described in the books. 
    After a wonderful day walking around Ystad I boarded the train back to Malmo. I don't think I was followed.
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Suggested 'Nordic Noir' reading by country:

Denmark
Miss Smilla's Feeling for Snow (film Miss Smilla's Sense of Snow starring Gabriel Byrne Richard Harris) by Peter Hoeg
Though the TV series The Killing didn't originate as a book, it now is, The Killing, the novel of the original series by popular detective writer David Hewson has, I'm told, a differing twist to the ending. The paperback is published by Pan and available at www.amazon.co.uk for £5.27stg.
Finland
Ice Moon (psychological thriller) by Jan Costin Wagner
Iceland
Jar City: A Reykjavik Thriller (Detective Inspector Erlendur Sveinsson) by Arnaldur Indridason
Norway
Butterfly Effect by Pernille Rygg
He Who Fears the Wolf (Inspector Konrad Sejer series) by Karin Fossum
The Bat Man (introduces Chandler-like tough detective Harry Hole in Oslo) by Jo Nesbo
Sweden 
Stieg Larsson's Millennium Trilogy The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, The Girl Who Played with Fire and The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest (the first of which is the best)
Faceless Killer (first of the Kurt Wallander mystery series) by Henning Mankell 
Backwater by Kerstin Ekman
Borkmann's Point (an Inspector Van Veeteren mystery) by Hakan Nesser
Roseanna (introduces Inspector Martin Beck) by Per Wahloo and Maj Sjowall
The Princess of Burundi by Kjell Eriksson
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Getting there:
    SAS fly to Copenhagen from Dublin. They have regular low-cost flights and the bebifits of a full-service airline. 23kg free baggage allowance, 25% child discount, eurobonus points and free check-in, regardless of it being via mobile boarding pass or normal check-in. SAS also offer connections via Copenhagen to Iceland & Finland.  www.flysas.com/en/ie/

More information:
 Ystad: In the Footsteps of Wallander, a free guide and maps of the town and its surrounding areas, for iPhone or Android. Download a pdf of the guide and maps, in english, at  www.ystad.se/Broschyr.nsf/0/.../$file/Wallanderfolder09_Eng.pdf

Ireland: HOTELS

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Follow the(Celeb)Stars
…at Home!

     Celebs!... Hello, Heat, VIP, OK, newsstands grown under them, so much so that there isn't room for a decent magazine. Where's History Ireland, National Geographic Traveller, Senior Times? And channel-to-channel celebrity game shows on TV, where....I'd be hard pressed to even recognize one. A lists, B lists, even Z list personalities. Don't get me going! So why on earth this piece on celebs visiting Ireland? Well I reckon any excuse is good for a break and if it's good enough for them it's certainly good enough for me. The nice people at www.hotels.com sent us this list of stars that have recently graced our shores, and where they stayed.

Limerick
Kim Kardashian Photo: Glenn Francis,
www.PacificProDigital.com
Kanye West
Photo: rodrigoferrari
Kim Kardashian West and Kanye West  chose Ireland as their honeymoon destination following their wedding in Florence. While many of the details of their trip remained under wraps, the Wests spent time in Limerick and Laois, even a trip to the local cinema.

Where to stay: The Savoy Hotel (*****)
Prices start from €109 per room per night on Hotels.com
*Prices are subject to availability at the time of booking


Kerry
Lost’ actress Michelle Rodriguez attended a wedding in county Kerry recently and kept her fans updated on her travels via her Instagram account; uploading scenic pictures of the Kingdom’s countryside and even a cheeky snap of her skinny dipping, calling it an ‘Irish hangover cure.’
Where to stay: Muckross Park Hotel & Spa (*****)
Bruce Springsteen  Photo: Bill Ebbesen
Prices start from €139 per room per night on Hotels.com
*Prices are subject to availability at the time of booking

Dublin
Bruce 'The Boss' Springsteen is no stranger to Irish soil, hailing it as his ‘adopted home’ for the past 29 years. Bruce recently paid a visit to the capital to watch his daughter Jessica make her show-jumping debut with Team USA.
Where to stay: Radisson Blu St Helen’s Hotel (*****)
Prices start from €106 per room per night on Hotels.com
*Prices are subject to availability at the time of booking

Derry
Friends and Cougar Town actress Courtney Cox, and her fiancé Johnny McDaid, visited the North West after landing in the Snow Patrol  hometown of Derry. It’s claimed the pair were looking for wedding venues.
Where to stay: The City Hotel Derry
Prices start from €91 per room per night on Hotels.com
*Prices are subject to availability at the time of booking
Sarah Jessica ParkerPhoto: David Shankbone
Matthew BroderickPhoto: David Shankbone

Donegal
Swapping the streets of Manhattan for the hills of Donegal, Sarah Jessica Parker loves nothing more than visiting her home away from home with her husband of 16 years, Matthew Broderick. They are a familiar site in the county, where they bask in the privacy and calm atmosphere of their country cottage.
Where to stay: Murvagh Links Manor (****)
Prices start from €80 per room per night on Hotels.com
*Prices are subject to availability at the time of booking


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