The Time Traveler's Guide to Sicily

History for Visitors

A popular travel guide book for Sicily is a great choice for ninety percent of those planning a visit to this fascinating island. This book was written for the other ten percent.

Inspired by the travelogues penned by cognoscenti and academics a century ago, long before the days of mass tourism, this is essentially a history of Sicily that presents information on specific sites and localities, along with details on architecture, geography and literature. There are even sections on Sicilian wine and olive oil. Its seemingly endless chronology covers history from neolithic times to our own era, and it's the longest timeline of Sicily ever published.

Most guide books are written by travel writers, with occasional updates outsourced to local 'fact checkers.' The author of this one is a leading historian who has written six books dealing with Sicily's complex past, some based on original research, earning the nickname 'Sicily's historian.' His writings are what tour leaders consult when they bring their groups to discover the world's most conquered island.

Not only is this book a good destination guide, it is a useful reference work full of details overlooked by the editors of most of the general-interest guide books published until now. Two archeological examples are the 'secret' Greek theatre at Agrigento, and Europe's two oldest mikvehs in the Jewish districts of Siracusa and Palermo. Among more recent topics are candid, erudite chapters on Fascism, the Mafia and the Second World War in Sicily.

Since 1999, Lou Mendola has been the chief history editor of the website Best of Sicily, the most popular destination guide dedicated to Sicily, with over two million unique visits each year. Somebody is reading his work every minute of every day. This has made him the most widely-read Sicilian historian of the present century.

Get this book to get the insider's view. And get to Sicily!

Louis Mendola

Louis Mendola is one of Sicily’s foremost medievalists, and one of the very few whose work is known beyond Italian borders. His first scholarly paper (on the Battle of Benevento of 1266) was published in 1985; others consider such topics as the history of the medieval Normans in Sicily. He wrote the first book covering the entire seven-century history of the Kingdom of Sicily, and the first English translations of two chronicles of the thirteenth century. Having researched in Italy, Britain, Spain, Germany, France and the Vatican, he has been consulted by The History Channel, the BBC and The New York Times. Read by millions internationally, his online articles have made him one of the most popular Sicilian historians of the present century.

Marketing & Publicity
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