Travel
Related: About this forumItaly, Beyond the Tourist Traps
John Hooper says he is often a little puzzled by Italy.
Its a country that seems to be all on the surface, but actually a lot of things are hidden, said Mr. Hooper, author of The Italians, a cultural study of the country that was published by Viking last month. That can be at times sinister, but it can also be fascinating and rewarding, if you go off the beaten track.
That is why Mr. Hooper, 65, thinks life is too short for tourist traps. Many people, he said, tend to prioritize Italys famous sites over its more sincere side, when in fact they should do the opposite.
Mr. Hooper, who lives and works in Rome as a journalist for The Economist and The Guardian, recently gave some cultural and culinary advice for travelers wanting to see Italy from an insiders perspective. Following are edited excerpts from a conversation with Mr. Hooper.
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/02/08/travel/italy-beyond-the-tourist-traps.html?hpw&rref=travel&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&module=well-region®ion=bottom-well&WT.nav=bottom-well
Laura PourMeADrink
(42,770 posts)It is magical. However, beyond the tourist traps -- also loved the northern area on the Swiss border - around Lugano. The climate is subtropical.
elleng
(136,183 posts)I never got to Lugano, but did drive from Florence to Lakes to St. Moritz.
Laura PourMeADrink
(42,770 posts)spend an entire summer there traipsing everywhere. It is so unbelievably diverse, isn't it? You can't say just go to Venice without thinking NO....then you wouldn't see Rome, or Capri, or Lake Como, and on and on.
Why do I think I have already mentioned this to you? (sorry, getting older) Lake Lugano, winds and borders Italy and Switzerland. It is sub-tropical. And, it's what George Harrison loved so much he had his ashes sprinkled there.
elleng
(136,183 posts)Lago Maggiore and Lago di Como, http://www.lonelyplanet.com/europe/travel-tips-and-articles/75832
We drove, after night in Rome, south to Sicily, then back to Rome > Florence > Como/Bellagio, day trip to St. Moritz, home from Milano.
On a later trip with the family, after daughters were born and 'old,' returned after a wedding in Poland, so went to Venice, Genoa, and Cinque Terre. And I visited my daughter during her college semester in Rome, by which time she'd mastered the language.
Laura PourMeADrink
(42,770 posts)were born there, in Pozdan. I want to go to see the primeval forest and to Kracow (which they say is the new better, less commercialized Prague). And, on a sadder note, they say if you visit the concentration camps there - it will change your life. I know I would be a sobbing basket case.
Your trips sound fantastic. Out of all those places, do you have a favorite?
elleng
(136,183 posts)I'd never wanted to visit Poland, due to WWII and treatment of Jewish people, but a friend was marrying there (north of Warsaw, small city,) so we took it as an excuse for a European trip.
Wedding celebration went on and on, I suspect due to times when families only gathered, from far away, for such events, so they go for days. We stayed for service and dinner party, MANY courses, and left the next day for Vienna, which I forgot to mention above. I surely did NOT visit concentration camps. Also, on our way to wedding, stopped overnight in Berlin (for train connection,) so visited Germany which I'd never wanted to visit. Saw Brandenburg Gate, which was a good thing cause husband's last name was Brandenburg. (He'd been adopted, so not REALLY German; Irish, instead.) Got a nice little trip around town from cab driver.
DID visit Prague with daughter, when I visited her in Rome; took a detour. Interesting place, that.