Near Mount Etna in Sicily lies Casa Cuseni, a beautiful house built in golden stone
- & the home which Daphne Phelps was astonished to find she had inherited in 1947. At the age of 34, war-weary from working as a psychiatric social worker, with barely any Italian, & precious little money, she plunged into a fascinating Sicilian world. Every imaginable problem had to be overcome, not only financial difficulties but local authorities & a house staff who initially felt no loyalty to the new Signorina but who gradually accepted her as a respected member of their small community. To help make ends meet, for many years she ran Casa Cuseni as a pensione & to her doors came Roald Dahl, Tennessee Williams, Bertrand Russell & Henry Faulkner. But just as important to her life & her story are the Sicilians with whom she shared the love & care of Casa Cuseni: Don Ciccio the local mafia leader, Vincenzio, general manservant who recited while he served the meals, Beppe, a Don Juan who scented his eyebrows & his moustache to attract the local girls; & above all the steadfast cook & housekeeper who lives with Daphne still & to whom this book is dedicated.