Hikaru Okuizumi Explained

Hikaru Okuizumi
Birth Date:6 February 1956
Birth Place:Mikawa, Yamagata Prefecture, Japan
Occupation:novelist
Nationality:Japanese

, born 6 February 1956, is a Japanese novelist.[1] [2] His real name is Yasuhiro Okuizumi.

Biography

Okuizumi was born in Mikawa, Yamagata Prefecture, and attended high school in Saitama Prefecture, before studying Humanities at ICU in Tokyo. He completed a master's course at the same university, but dropped out midway through his doctoral course. In 1993, he won the Noma Literary Prize for New Writers for the novel, Novalis no Inyō, and the Akutagawa Prize for The Stones Cry Out the following year. The Stones Cry Out has been translated into a number of languages including English and French. Okuizumi started working at Kinki University in 1999, and continues to teach there.

Awards

Selected works

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Natsume. Sōseki. Marcus. Marvin. Reflections in a glass door: memory and melancholy in the personal writings of Natsume Sōseki. 9 May 2011. September 2009. University of Hawaii Press. 978-0-8248-3306-0. 193–.
  2. Book: Miura, Noriko. Marginal voice, marginal body: the treatment of the human body in the works of Nakagami Kenji, Leslie Marmon Silko, and Salman Rushdie. 9 May 2011. December 2000. Universal-Publishers. 978-1-58112-109-4. 49–.
  3. Web site: 谷崎潤一郎賞に奥泉光さん. September 9, 2014. dead. https://archive.today/20140909132907/http://www.jiji.com/jc/c?g=soc_30&k=2014090900843. September 9, 2014.