Travel+Leisure Southeast Asia – August 2019

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TRAVELANDLEISUREASIA.COM / AUGUST 2019 87


I was on the Greek island of Santorini, and had


stumbled upon the rooftop terrace at the wonderful


Atlantis Books in the town of Oia—pronounced ee-ya,


like a gasp of wonder. I found an alfresco reading desk


and an empty chair, where I sat for a moment and gazed


out, alone and unimpeded, at the vast, sunken heart of


the island’s caldera. There were those famous volcanic


cliffs, the whitewashed houses, and the occasional blue


dome of an Orthodox church, all framed by a perfect


azure sky and sea.


Santorini is known as the most photogenic place in the


Cyclades—the archipelago that spirals through the


unearthly waters of the Aegean Sea, southeast of the


Greek mainland. It owes its striking looks to a freak


geological occurrence. More than 3,500 years ago, a huge


volcanic eruption collapsed the center of what was then a


much larger island, allowing the sea to fill its interior.


The result of this explosion—thought by some to have


inspired the myth of Atlantis—is a vast oceanic


amphitheater, and one of the most dramatic landscapes


in all of Greece.


With its vertiginous location above the caldera, Oia


offers the best views. Which is why, in the hours before


sunset—even in October, when I visited—the town takes


on the feverish atmosphere of a Black Friday sale.


Increasingly frantic people perch on terraces and jostle


for the best angle on the setting sun. There was a greater


likelihood of losing an eye to a selfie stick than having a


transcendent encounter with the island’s natural beauty.


Even during the daytime, Oia sometimes felt like it was


bursting at the seams. Within seconds of sitting down on


the tiny rooftop at Atlantis Books, I had my view blocked


variously by a woman from Nanjing in a bridal gown


posing for her pre-wedding photos, a Spanish couple


celebrating 45 years of marriage, three Korean women,


five Canadians, and a man with a tattoo of Hannibal


Lecter on his head.


Tourism on Santorini took off in the 1960s, but since


the advent of social media, the industry has been


turbocharged by a critical mass of Instagram posts,


bucket-list blogs, and listicles about the best sunsets on


earth. Around 2 million people now visit the island each


ONE MORNING AT THE


END OF LAST SUMMER,


I FOUND MYSELF, VERY


BRIEFLY, TO BE THE


SOLE CUSTODIAN OF


THE WORLD’S MOST


BEAUTIFUL VIEW.

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