Mariko Ōhara Explained

Birth Date:20 March 1959
Birth Place:Osaka, Japan
Language:Japanese
Nationality:Japanese
Alma Mater:University of the Sacred Heart
Spouse: [1]
Awards:1991 Seiun Award for Haiburiddo Chairudo
1980 Nihon SF Taisho Award for Sensō-wo Enjita Kamigamitachi

is a Japanese science fiction writer. She won the 6th Hayakawa SF Contest in 1980, when she was still a student. Later she published various SF works and became the 10th president of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of Japan. Ōhara is the Winner of the Nihon SF Taisho Award in 1994.

Biography

Ōhara was born in Osaka. She wrote Kirk/Spock fan fiction in her teens. She graduated in psychology from the University of the Sacred Heart (Japan) (Japanese: 聖心女子大学).

Ōhara won the 6th Hayakawa SF Contest for her short story "Hitori de Aruite itta Neko (A Cat who Walked along Alone)" in 1980. Next year, in 1981, she graduated from the University and started publishing her stories in the S-F Magazine. She belongs to the 3rd generation[2] of the Japanese SF writers.

In 1991, her "Haiburiddo Chairudo, Hybrid Child" (Japanese: ハイブリッド・チャイルド won the Seiun Award for Japanese novel. Then, in 1995 she won the 15th Nihon SF Taisho Award for "Sensō-wo Enjita Kamigamitachi, Gods who Bandied War" (Japanese: 戦争を演じた神々たち).[3]

She was a science fiction reviewer for Asahi Shimbun from April 1998 to March 2002, and she was on the jury for the Nihon SF Taisho Awards from 1997 to 1999.[4] She was also the 10th president of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of Japan from September 1999 to September 2001.

Ōhara is a member of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of Japan, of the Japanese Writers' Association (JA), and, of the Nihon Pen Club (JA).

Awards

Selected works

Novels

Works in English translation

Video game works

Mariko Ōhara did the scenario for Quintet's video game Illusion of Gaia, along with Masaya Hashimoto and Tomoyoshi Miyazaki.

Notes and references

External links

Notes and References

  1. (ja) The Pigeon Post Retrieved 22 July 2019
  2. 1st generation: Born in around 1930s. 2nd generation: Born in 1940s. 3rd generation: Born in 1950s.
  3. Web site: Nihon SF Taisho Award Winners List. 2010-01-28. Science Fiction Writers of Japan.
  4. (ja) Official Site: Introduction Retrieved 22 July 2019
  5. http://www.kurodahan.com/mt/e/catalog/j0021cate.html Speculative Japan | Kurodahan Press
  6. http://www.kurodahan.com/mt/e/catalog/j0025cate.html Speculative Japan 2 | Kurodahan Press
  7. News: Kosaka . Kris . 'Hybrid Child': Enter a sprawling excursion into the unknown . September 22, 2018 . . August 25, 2018.