
We leave Italy today. I've been downright terrible about keeping up with this blog, though I hope to fill in the gaps when we get home. (I already have about 4 pages about food written, waiting for editing and photos).
The lack of diligence is partly due to spotty internet access, partly down to easy access to Prosecco, and partly because we've been so constantly on the move. For such a small country, Italy is huge. It has only been a country for 150 years (they just celebrated their sesquicentenial this year). Each region has retained ferocious cultural autonomy and identity. Referring to "Italian food" is almost as absurd as talking about "Chinese food" as if it were a singular thing. In five weeks, we only barely scraped the surface.
There has always been a distinct north/south divide that equates roughly to rich/poor, butter/olive oil, fresh pasta/dried pasta, cream sauce/tomato sauce. For me, the north/south distinction was most evident in terms of touristiness. Pretty much all of the northern places we visited--Florence, hill towns in Tuscany, Cinque Terre, Venice (especially Venice), Ravenna--felt like Disneyland. Everything was just as you would expect it to be. Everyone we met, even in the tiniest towns, spoke English. Nothing unexpected happened and we felt pretty secure that nothing would.
Don't get me wrong. Those places were beautiful and full of so much history and amazing art and architecture. I am incredibly glad we saw them. But, though we really only touched the surface of, say, Florence, I don't feel much compelled to return.
Then there was Naples.

Suddenly, we started meeting people who spoke little or no English. Flailing though it was, I was forced to speak Italian. And surprising things happened. Even the crazy 3 km, 20 euro gypsy cab ride from the train station, which left us stranded nowhere near our hotel, was welcome after the sedate experience of the north.
We were warned by everyone that Naples is dangerous and I don't doubt that street crime is a real problem. But when we were standing in a warren of narrow, dark, tiny streets amidst an impossible jumble of people and shops, trying to figure out where our rooms were, a young girl, maybe 15, stopped and asked us (in Italian, or maybe Neopolitan) where we were trying to go. When we told her the name of the street she and another man pointed us there.
Here is Theresa standing at the alley entrance to our inn. Seriously, there's not even a sign, and the stairway up is dimly lit, steep, and bare concrete. But the room was truly lovely once you got there.

Although people were helpful when asked in the north, no one ever volunteered help when we were clearly lost. Naples had that familiar sense of urban chaos: there are dangers and at the same time people will go surprisingly out of their way to help you. The people we met--our innkeeper, our pizza-making tour guide and her boyfriend, the crazy custodian in Pompeii (more details to come, I promise) were warm and genuinely excited to talk to us and share their city.


If (when) we return to Italy, we will start in Naples and head south.
We will also certainly return to Sardinia, where we've spent the past 7 days. For all of Naples crazed urbanity, Sadinia embodies wildness in the opposite way. So much of it is remote and its wildness untamed because the landscape is forbiddingly rugged.

It is covered in weird, prehistoric ruins called nuraghe that they know precious little about.

We got lost here, too, and loved every minute of the dramatic changes in vista around every turn as we tried to find our way back to our placid, friendly beachside hotel.

When our rental car died Eurocar towed it away without sending a replacement, informing us blithely on the phone that they had reserved a car for us in Orosei, 25 km away. When I asked how we were supposed to get there, without a car the customer "service" person told me that they would reimburse us up to 30 euro for a cab, but that we'd have to cover the difference. But, I told him, there ARE NO cabs in Cala Gonone, a tiny coastal town. The receptionist at our hotel, who had been doing battle on our behalf with Eurocar for an hour, offered us George, who does odd jobs for the hotel. He spoke not one word of English, but drove us to Orosei in Pandino, his 1998 Panda (I asked. He looked at the registration to be sure).
No mention of compensation was ever made (though we made sure to get him enough to at least cover his gas).

So, for now, farewell Italy. I hope someday I can return and see, eat and drink much, much more.