Donnafugata, the country seat of the Salina family in Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa’s novel The Leopard, is a fictional place, but it's a fusion of Santa Margherita del Belice (where the Tomasi di Lampedusa palace was destroyed by a 1968 earthquake) and the Chiesa Madre and Benedictine Convent in Palma di Montecchiaro. The town was founded in the 17th century by Tomasi di Lampedusa’s ancestors, when Spain, who ruled Sicily, needed the island to be its primary source of wheat. As rural Sicily was beset with banditry, and considered far too dangerous for individual families to live in isolated farmhouses, the Crown encouraged landowners to found new towns, where peasants could live in relative safety, heading out to the fields each day and returning at night, to live cheek to cheek with their animals in one-story houses. These days, the city has lost its royal luster, but for fans of The Leopard, a visit to the convent to buy almond cookies from the remaining nuns at Monastero Del Ss. Rosario is an eerie experience, offering a brief glimpse of the hidden lives that have changed little in centuries. If you are lucky, you can take a guided tour of the monastery, but the tour times are inconsistent.