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Celebrity Travel: Go Away With Chelsea Cain

By Jae-Ha Kim, Tribune Content Agency on

New York Times bestselling author Chelsea Cain's latest thriller, "One Kick" (Simon and Schuster, $25.99), kicks off a new series of novels centered on a former abductee, who becomes immersed in a missing child case. Based out of Portland, Oregon, Cain says nothing completes a road trip like a gas station PayDay bar. As for her dream trip? "Murder on the Orient Express!" says Cain, 42. Keep up to date on her work at http://chelseacain.com/, or via her Twitter feed (https://twitter.com/ChelseaCain).

Q. What is your favorite vacation destination?

A. Poipu Beach, Kauai, Hawaii. I know that probably seems cliche. I wish I could say Bali or the Galapagos Islands, because how cool would that make me seem? I have traveled a fair amount and I have visited some great cities. I love architecture and museums and castles and ruins and central markets and even double-decker bus tours. But, I am a sucker for a tropical beach. It's ironic because I am fair-haired and pale skinned and I burn and blister in any sort of direct sunlight. I think it's because I grew up spending the school year with my mom in the Pacific Northwest and the summers with my dad in Florida. No matter what fabulous place I visit, I don't feel like I'm on vacation unless I'm dehydrated and covered with sunscreen.

Q. What untapped destination should people know about?

A. Dzibilchaltun, a Mayan ruin outside of Merida in the Yucatan, Mexico. It's an amazing place and includes The Temple of the Seven Dolls. I especially recommend visiting the natural spring at the center of the ruin. They call it Cenote Xlakah. It is absolutely ancient. This is one of those ruins visited by travelers instead of tourists. Hire a guide. And bring your swimsuit.

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

A. I took the train from Iowa to San Antonio, Texas, to visit my grandparents. It was me, my mom and my cousin, Jessica. Jessica and I each got a bag of candy and a comic book. It was very exciting. I spent a lot of time with my head pressed against the window. The ground changed color. I remember that so specifically -- how red it got in Texas. Even the rivers were red. It was my first sense of landscaping shifting.

Q. What's the most important thing you've learned from your travels?

A. I used to write travel essays and I was struck by how the fact of writing about a place would change my relationship with it. I would make completely different choices, do things I wouldn't have normally, because I had to fill this narrative shape. And it was wonderful. It made travel so much more alive. So, I try to travel like that, open to any experience, as if I have a word count to fill. I am a control freak, but not when I travel. For some reason when I travel I am able to surrender more than in my real life. I am able to let go. I think it's why I like it so much.

Q. Have you traveled to a place that stood out so much that you felt compelled to incorporate it into your work?

 

A. All the time. But I'm a thriller writer, so incorporating a place into my work can be complicated. It usually involves bloodshed. A few years ago my husband and daughter and I were having lunch at Timberline Lodge, a ski lodge on Mount Hood in Oregon. I was overcome by what a great location it was, and I said, quite loudly, "I'm going to murder someone here!" And everyone else around us in the dining room got really quiet.

Q. Where would you like to go that you have never been to before?

A. Morocco. I've had a hotel picked out since I was 14 years old. I also know exactly what caftan I'm wearing. I'm going to look fabulous.

Q. When you go away, what are some of your must-have items?

A. I always figure if I have my passport, my boarding pass and a credit card, I'll be OK. But ideally I have a trip journal, earplugs, a good book and my 9-year-old daughter, who is, incidentally, my favorite traveling companion.

Q. What is your best vacation memory?

A. I took my daughter to London for the royal wedding. I was eight when Diana and Charles got married and I remember getting up early and watching the wedding on TV and then spending the summer drawing Diana's dress over and over again. I was obsessed. So when William and Kate's engagement was announced I turned to my daughter -- who was in kindergarten at the time -- and said, "We're going!" I'd been to London many times, but never with her. My husband, having recognized the craziness of traveling to London at exactly the same time as 10 million other people, decided to stay home. It was Eliza's first international trip. We were there five days. She was a champ. Wedding aside, we visited a lot of places that it would not have occurred to me to visit without a kid to entertain -- the Tower of London, the London Eye. I kept Eliza fueled with a constant supply of ice cream. It's amazing what she still remembers. Sugar is a powerful stimulant.

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Jae-Ha Kim is a New York Times bestselling author and travel writer. You can respond to this column by visiting her website at www.jaehakim.com. You may also follow "Go Away With..." on Twitter at @GoAwayWithJae where Jae-Ha Kim welcomes your questions and comments.


(c) 2014 DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

 

 

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