Where to stay when you leave.
Greece Hotel Guide: Emelisse Hotel on Captain Corelli's Island
1/10/2008 at 9:05 AM
Tags: Greece Hotel Guide, Kefalonia Hotels, Monica Guy, Luxury Hotels, Beach Hotels
Our far-flung correspondent Monica Guy has once again slapped together a guide to a place we have only dreamed about visiting. This time, she's summing up various hotels in Greece. Got a tip, question or suggestion about where to stay? Send it our way.

Odysseus made the Ionian island of Ithaki famous - it was his home town, says Homer - but it was the rather lesser hero Captain Corelli who put its huge neighbour Kefalonia (Cephallonia) on the modern-day map.
Avoid the capital Argostoli and head straight for Fiskardo, the only town in Kefalonia saved by the gods in the 1953 earthquake and now a sparky sailing and fishing port lined with Venetian-style houses.
And when you get there, follow the signs to the Emelisse Hotel for the ultimate in Greek-sunshine luxury.
The hotel is slightly out of the town - around a 15-minute walk - but fantastically quiet and serene. If you're looking for romance, or have found it and simply want to revel in it, then look out over the sunset or up into the starry sky. One of the cheesiest, but let's face it, the most happy feelings you'll get in a long while.
Lives up to its five stars
The facilities are 5-star and the design is simple yet elegant. Nothing that'll blow your mind, but nothing that'll irritate either. It's all natural, earthy colours and wooden furniture.
You can get anything from a standard double to a family maisonette to a Presidential Suite (you don't have to be a president to sleep in it, but it helps if you have a similar budget). Tell them it's your honeymoon and you'll get a free bottle of champers.
Get out there
You'd be tempted to spend all day by one of the six swimming pools (including private pools for the Presidential Suite and Family Apartment) or lounging on the terrace, but they won't let you. There's a tennis court, fitness room, and free diving lessons as well as boat and bike rental and mini-cruises or sea-kayaking in the bay.
Good noises generally about the restaurant, too, or rather both restaurants. One overlooks the bay and has a heated infinity pool and jacuzzi in the centre (so you can eat with your bikini on perhaps? One way of stopping yourself stuffing your face...). The Ostrako restaurant is a heavier affair, with poshed-up Greek-style food.
Find yourself a Captain Corelli and dig up some buried treasure to pay for the stay - word is, it's not cheap, but as always in Greece you get what you pay for.
[Photo: N@alie]
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Greece Hotel Guide
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