Yes, that white one is gorgeous, Hans; thanks!
As Oron says, Cyclamen graecum is wonderful for mediterranean-climate gardens. The lustrous patterns on the velvety leaves, almost every plant differing from its neighbours, make it very special even when it's not in flower, and it stands up to long months of drought without worry. In our hot south-slope garden in the south of Greece, plants in full sun can get rather stressed, and they do better with a little shade there, but I think that is exceptional; in milder gardens they seem perfectly happy in full sun.
If you start with one or two plants, you'll find that they do start seeding themselves around, and the resulting plants, usually "sown" by ants, will probably do even better than the ones you planted yourself. As the photo shows, these wild-sown plants can end up in the most extraordinary places, all sorts of intriguing nooks and crannies.
Incidentally we have a venerable plant of C. graecum, our very first cyclamen, which - NB this was before the CITES regulations, and before we knew better! - we dug up on the island of Skopelos nearly 40 years ago, and which, in its pot here under unshaded glass in the UK and left unwatered until it flowers, always comes into flower much earlier than any other graecums. This year it started in July.