Baltimore Sun Sunday

CELEBRITY TRAVELER

Jessica Jung imagines her own experience­s

- By Jae-Ha Kim

Before becoming an author and the creator of the fashion line Blanc & Eclare, Jessica Jung was a member of the K-pop group Girls’ Generation. Born in San Francisco, Jung’s young adult novel “Shine” (Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, $18.99) tells the story of Rachel, a young girl who dreams of becoming a singing sensation. Jung’s debut book is being released in 17 countries this fall. ACE Entertainm­ent the team behind the Netflix adaptation of the YA novel “To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before” — is developing “Shine” for film and television.

Q: Many people may think you’re writing about your own experience­s. How much is fact versus your imaginatio­n?

A: It’s a mix, really. “Shine” is focused on Rachel’s training days, and I took a lot of inspiratio­n from what it was like for me as well. Like me, Rachel doesn’t live in the trainee house, she lives at home. Like me, she is juggling a lot of different pressures from school, home and competitiv­e training. Like me, she has some close friends and some rivals. Unlike me, she gets a whirlwind romance with a successful idol along the way. Obviously, I wanted it to be entertaini­ng and authentic at the same time, so there’s a balance of real details and escapist fictional elements.

Q: If you and Rachel were travel mates …

A: We would certainly have to pay significan­t excess baggage fees! Not sure if that’s a dealbreake­r, but it would make traveling a bit cumbersome. Other than that, Rachel would be a superb travel mate.

Q: How much of your book did you write on the road?

A: When I can find time to reread drafts by the hotel pool, or gain inspiratio­n by walking around a new city, it’s great. It’s definitely time consuming, but I’m so used to living my life on the road that the travel aspect didn’t change this much. If anything, the flights give me time to read and write. And reread. And rewrite.

Q: Do you have a sequel in the works?

A: I can’t say too much about it yet, but I’m working on the sequel. Readers will get to see a lot more of Rachel and what her life was like as part of a major girls’ group. It’s very personal to me, actually! But it should also deliver the same wish fulfillmen­t and fun of the first book.

Q: What was the first trip you took as a child?

A: As far as I can remember, it was to Korea. However, I was so young that the most memorable part of that trip was running around a plane thinking

QI was flying. I guess it was destiny that I would gravitate to spending a lot of time on planes.

Q: What’s the most important thing you’ve learned from your travels?

A: To learn as much as possible, whether it’s food, cultural or geographic­al. It’s really shaped who I am today.

Q: What is your guilty pleasure when you’re on the road?

A: Ramen noodles on a long-haul flight. Guilty as charged.

Q: What kind of research do you do before you go away on a trip?

A: When it comes to visiting a new city, my priorities are finding the best restaurant­s and the best shopping.

Q: Do you speak any foreign languages? And in the same train of thought, do you pick up new languages easily?

A: I speak Korean and English fluently, and I’m a student of Mandarin. I wouldn’t say I’m good at picking up languages, but I’ve been told that my pronunciat­ion is rather accurate.

For more from the reporter, visit www.jaehakim.com.

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BLANC & ECLARE

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