Rieko Matsuura Explained

Rieko Matsuura
松浦 理英子
Birth Date:7 August 1958
Birth Place:Matsuyama, Ehime, Japan
Occupation:Novelist, Short story writer
Nationality:Japanese
Citizenship:Japanese
Education:Aoyama Gakuin University
Notableworks:Apprenticeship of Big Toe P

is a Japanese novelist and short story writer. She is a recipient of the Yomiuri Prize.

History

Matsuura was born in Matsuyama, Ehime Prefecture in Japan. Her middle school years were passed in Marugame, Kagawa Prefecture.

She went from Marugame West Middle School to Kagawa Prefecture Otemae Middle School, a private school in the area. Matsuura attended Aoyama Gakuin University where she majored in French literature. In her teens, she had read Marquis de Sade and Jean Genet, and she wished to be in the French literature department so she could read their works in the original language. In 1978, while enrolled at school, she won the award for writing "The Day of the Funeral", her first book.[1] In 1987, her book Natural Woman was given a rave review by Kenji Nakagami, bringing attention to her. In 1994, her book Apprenticeship of Big Toe P, about the travels of a woman whose big toe on her right foot turns into a penis, won the Women Writers' Prize and was nominated for the Mishima Yukio Prize.[2]

Notes and References

  1. News: Japanese Book News. Summer 2008. Japan Foundation. 2009-08-01.
  2. News: 読売文学賞の人(1) 小説賞「犬身(けんしん)」 松浦理英子さん 49. https://archive.today/20080220231856/http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/book/news/20080204bk03.htm. dead. 2008-02-20. 2008-02-04. Yomiuri. 2009-08-01.
  3. News: 犬身 [著] 松浦理英子|date=2007-11-04|publisher=Asahi|accessdate=2009-08-01|url-status=dead|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20081014055047/http://book.asahi.com/review/TKY200711060213.html|archivedate=2008-10-14}} Additionally, the book became a best-seller. She co-wrote the script for the Natural Woman movie, which was also released in 1994.

    Seven years passed between Apprenticeship of Big Toe P and Opposite Version, and another seven until Kenshin was published. The latter book, published in 2007, won the Yomiuri Prize in 2008.[2] She is currently a committee member for the Shinchō New Writers Award.

    Bibliography

    • (1980)
    • (1981)
    • (1987)
    • (1993); English translation by Michael Emmerich (Kodansha, 2010)
    • (essay) (1994)
    • (essay) (1994); English translation by Amanda Seaman in Woman Critiqued, ed. Rebecca Copeland (University of Hawai'i Press, 2006)
    • (1998)
    • (2007)
    • (2007)

    External links

    ]

    .