Six places.
Considered carefully.
Long-form guides to Istanbul, Çeşme, Cappadocia, Alanya, Bodrum, and Antalya — written for guests who want to understand where they are going, not just book it.
Two continents, fifteen million people, and — quietly at the centre of it all — some of the most accomplished academic hospitals in the Eastern Mediterranean.
On the westernmost tip of Türkiye — closer to the Greek islands than to most of its own country — Çeşme keeps the kind of Aegean stillness most coasts have traded away.
A volcanic plateau at 1,100 metres, carved by two million years of wind and water into something that looks like another planet.
A Seljuk fortress above a turquoise bay, three decades of Northern European medical tourism infrastructure, and a Mediterranean that stays warm enough to swim in December.
A Crusader castle on a Carian peninsula, a harbour where gulets and superyachts share the same deep blue water, and an aesthetic medicine infrastructure that rivals Istanbul for its category.
A Roman harbour beneath Byzantine walls, three JCI-accredited hospitals within twenty minutes, and the busiest international airport on the Turkish Mediterranean.





