Ōtarō Maijō

Ōtarō Maijō
Born 1973
Fukui Prefecture, Japan
Occupation Novelist, short-story writer, translator
Language Japanese
Period 2001–present
Genre Fiction, crime fiction, thriller
Notable awards Mephisto Prize (2001)
Mishima Prize (2003)
In this Japanese name, the family name is Maijō.

Ōtarō Maijō (舞城 王太郎 Maijō Ōtarō, born 1973) is a Japanese novelist from Fukui Prefecture. Winner of the 19th Mephisto Prize for Smoke, Soil, and Sacrifices, and the 16th Mishima Yukio Prize for Asura Girl. His short story, "Drill Hole in the Brain" was translated into English as part of Del Rey's Faust anthology, and described by the Anime News Network as the "crowning glory" of the anthology.[1]

Style

Many of Maijō's novels are set in Fukui and make extensive use of that dialect. He is known for an aggressive, colloquial writing style. His early works were mystery novels, but he has branched out into literary magazines. He illustrates much of his own work, and has contributed several brief manga to Faust.

Works in English translation

Novel
Short story

Awards and nominations

Works[3][4]

Novels

Short story collections

Translations

Real Coffee

Currently, Otaro Maijo is part of the Real Coffee Project, which, according to their website, is attempting to inspire new and better Japanese movies. Maijo has written and illustrated a number of flash movies, which are hosted on the website.

References

External links

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