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Chapter Two – The Hotel that Knows your Name

“S Hotel Kingston held me, the way only Jamaica knows how.”

Photo Courtesy of Booking.com

The front doors slide open with a soft sigh, and Kingston’s late‑afternoon light spills into the lobby like warm honey. I step in, suitcase rolling behind me, and before I can even adjust my glasses, a voice calls out, bright, melodic, unmistakably Jamaican.

“Welcome home, Miss Smith. We’ve been expecting you.”

It’s the kind of greeting that stops you mid‑stride. Not scripted. Not corporate. Human. Present. The kind of hospitality Langston Hughes would have paused to write down, soft‑spoken, deeply Caribbean, and rooted in a cultural memory older than the hotel itself.

This is S Hotel Kingston, and from the moment I arrive, the central question forms itself: What does it mean for a hotel to not just host you, but to hold you?

S Hotel Kingston sits in the heart of the city, syncing with the Kingston pulse. Outside, taxis weave through traffic, vendors call out their offerings, and the city’s rhythm moves like a drumline warming up. Inside, the lobby is cool, modern, and intentional. Art on the walls. Staff who greet you like family. A space that feels curated around our love for music.

The Jamaica Tourist Board placed us here for the IMC press trip, and I understand why within minutes. This hotel wasn’t trying to imitate Jamaica. It is Jamaica, polished, contemporary, but still carrying the warmth of a mother’s kitchen and the confidence of a capital city that knows its worth.

I sit down for my first meal, expecting the usual hotel‑safe menu. Instead, the server smiles and says: “We have red pea soup today.” Who says no to red pea soup, and listen, when I tell you the food tasted like my mother’s cooking, I mean it with my whole chest. The seasoning, the tenderness, the balance of heat and comfort was Jamaica in a bowl. Not watered down. Not tourist‑friendly. Real. Just minus the spinners.

I take a sip and close my eyes. For a moment, I’m back in my mother’s kitchen, barefoot, listening to her hum while the pot simmers.

Every hotel has amenities. Pools. Gyms. Bars, but S Hotel’s signature moment is a feeling. It happened on my second morning. I’m heading out early for the IMC panels, juggling my notebook, my phone, and my press badge. A staff member I have never met steps forward, gently takes the badge from my hand, clips it neatly to my lanyard, and says: “Let me help you start your day right.” It’s small. It’s simple, but it’s everything.

Hospitality is about being seen, and S Hotel Kingston saw me.

At night, the lobby transforms. Journalists drift in from panels and dinners: Sidney with her soft‑spoken brilliance, Keka with her comedic timing, Jasmine with her sharp eye for detail. We gather in the lounge like characters in a Langston Hughes travel vignette; African, diasporic, brilliant, tired, and alive. The staff asks about our day. They remember our name. They remember our orders. They remember our stories. This is cultural intelligence woven into service.

S Hotel Kingston has an incredible way of introducing you to Kingston. The staff recommends local spots, not the glossy brochure ones, but the real ones. They talk about the city with pride, not performance. They understand that travelers want a relationship with the place, and Kingston? Kingston rewards those who approach with respect.

On my last night, I stood at the window overlooking the city. Cars glide by. Music floats up from somewhere down the street. The air is warm, familiar. I realize I’m not ready to leave. S Hotel Kingston has done what few hotels manage: It made me feel rooted as a Jamaican woman returning to a city that still has stories for me, and trust me, there is so much more to tell.

Stay tuned for Chapter Three in this week’s edition of the Toronto Caribbean Newspaper, with Chapter Four launching this weekend. The story is just beginning.

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Written By

We, as humans are guaranteed certain things in life: stressors, taxes, bills and death are the first thoughts that pop to mind. It is not uncommon that many people find a hard time dealing with these daily life stressors, and at times will find themselves losing control over their lives. Simone Jennifer Smith’s great passion is using the gifts that have been given to her, to help educate her clients on how to live meaningful lives. The Hear to Help Team consists of powerfully motivated individuals, who like Simone, see that there is a need in this world; a need for real connection. As the founder and Director of Hear 2 Help, Simone leads a team that goes out into the community day to day, servicing families with their educational, legal and mental health needs.Her dedication shows in her Toronto Caribbean newspaper articles, and in her role as a host on the TCN TV Network.

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