| Goong (manhwa) | |
|---|---|
| 궁 (The Palace) |
|
| Genre | Comedy, Drama, Romance, Shōjo |
| Manhwa | |
| Author | So-Hee Park |
| Publisher | |
| English publisher | |
| Serialized in | Wink |
| Original run | 2002 – Ongoing |
| Volumes | 18 |
Goong (Hangul: 궁, literally "Palace") is a currently ongoing Manhwa series by author So-Hee Park. Comedy (from the Greek κωμωδίαkomodia has a popular meaning (any discourse generally intended to amuse especially in Television, Film, and Drama is the specific mode of Fiction represented in Performance. A romance novel is a literary Genre developed in Western culture, mainly in English-speaking countries is a Japanese word originally derived from a Chinese expression written with the same characters Manhwa (manɦʷa is the general Korean term for Comics and print Cartoons (common usage also includes animated cartoons ICEkunion published South Korean Manhwa Comics in the United States. Manhwa (manɦʷa is the general Korean term for Comics and print Cartoons (common usage also includes animated cartoons It has been adapted into a popular TV drama series of the same name, known in English as Princess Hours. Princess Hours ( Korean: ko 궁, Hanja: 宫 romanized as Goong and also known as The Imperial Household As of December 2007, there are currently 16 volumes published in Korea.
Goong is licensed and published in North America in English by Yen Press (absorbed from Ice Kunion).
Shin Chae-Gyeong
Lee Shin
Lee Yul
Seong Hyo-Rin (* Her surname is changed to "Min" in the drama version)
King
Queen Consort
Queen Dowager
Yul's Mother
Gung Eunuch
Shin Chae-Jun
Chae-Gyeong's Mother
Chae-Gyeong's Father
Chae-Gyeong's Grandfather
An Seong-Ji
Seung Mok-Han
Oh Mi-Roo
Chae-Gyeong Shin is a normal high-schooler who happens to go to the same school as the Seja, or crown prince of Korea, in a fantasy, make-believe world where the Korean royalty still exists. After getting a "C" in music class, she spies the prince proposing to a girl (and getting rejected by her. ) Fortunately for Chae-Gyeong, she manages to escape without having her face seen. Later that day, she goes through tortuous debates over whether to tell her friend Mok-Han about the incident or not. At the very moment where she almost blurts out everything, she is caught again by the Seja, who isn't fooled by her pretence of hiding her face away into Mok-Han's chest, and warns her to keep silent about the whole story (or else face life-imprisonment). Back at the palace, the King sends for Shin and gives him a picture of his future bride-to-be, and guess who it is? Chae-Gyeong! Shin explodes into laughter and agrees to the marriage. In the meantime, Yul comes back from England and has decides to enrol into Shin's school, ending up for some reason in Chae-Gyeong's class.
Chae-Gyeong, during this time, is having a difficult time choosing between her family's wishes (they were almost bankrupt at that point) and her own desire to choose her own path. In the end, it is the image of her mother's patched sleeve that gives her the courage to accept the proposal during an audience with the Queen. When she starts having second thoughts, it is already too late, and very soon Chae-Gyeong is forced to enter and live in the palace, learn its endless traditions and rituals, without permission of going back home. Lonely and depressed, even the sight of Shin, who had told her earlier that he would never do something as cruel as marrying (and making a puppet of) the girl he truly loved, is welcome to her; but when he finally makes his appearance, it is to simply tell her that he'd divorce her if she cannot get adjusted to palace life.