- Source: Kaoru Takamura
Kaoru Takamura (髙村 薫, Takamura Kaoru, born 1953) is a Japanese writer from Osaka. She has won numerous Japanese literary awards, including the Mystery Writers of Japan Award, the Japan Adventure Fiction Association Prize, the Naoki Prize, the Yomiuri Prize, and the Noma Literary Prize, and her work has been adapted for film and television.
Early life and education
Takamura was born in Osaka in 1953. After graduating from International Christian University, she worked for a trading company, and did not start writing until her 30s.
Career
Takamura's first novel, Ōgon o daite tobe (黄金を抱いて翔ベ, Grab the Money and Run), was published in 1990 and won the Japan Mystery and Suspense Grand Prize. Two years later her novel Riviera o ute (リヴィエラを撃て, Shoot Riviera), a thriller about an Irish man mysteriously murdered in Tokyo as part of an apparent international espionage plot, was published, winning both the Mystery Writers of Japan Award and the Japan Adventure Fiction Association Prize. Ōgon o daite tobe was later adapted into the 2012 Kazuyuki Izutsu film of the same name, starring Satoshi Tsumabuki and Tadanobu Asano.
In 1993 Takamura's mystery novel Mākusu no yama (マークスの山, Marks' Mountain), about a boy who survives his parents' suicide and grows up to be a psychopathic serial killer, won the Naoki Prize as well as Takamura's second consecutive Japan Adventure Fiction Association Prize. The book sold more than a million copies. It was later adapted into a 1995 Yoichi Sai film and a 2010 Wowow television drama. By the mid-1990s Takamura was seen as the "Queen of Mysteries", but in 1997, after completing a fictionalized account of the Glico Morinaga case titled Redi joka (レディ・ジョーカー, Lady Joker), she changed the focus of her writing from mystery novels to literary fiction. Lady Joker was later adapted into the 2004 Hideyuki Hirayama film Lady Joker and a 2013 Wowow television drama.
Takamura subsequently published a trilogy of novels about the lives of four generations of a conservative political family, starting with Haruko jōka (晴子情歌, Haruko's Love Song) in 2002, continuing with Shin Ria-ō (新リア王, A New King Lear) in 2005, and concluding with Taiyō o hiku uma (太陽を曳く馬, The Horse that Pulls the Sun) in 2009. Shin Ria-ō won the Shinran Prize, and Taiyō o hiku uma won the Yomiuri Prize. In 2016 she published the novel Tsuchi no ki (土の記, Working the Earth), about an elderly farmer coping with the death of his wife, alienation from his daughter, and disruption caused by the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami. Tsuchi no ki won the 70th Noma Literary Prize, the 44th Jirō Osagari Prize, and a Mainichi Arts Award.
Writing style
Takamura's fiction focuses especially on the psychological aspects of her characters. She also addresses larger contemporary social issues, both in her novels and in the nonfiction essays and commentary that she writes for newspapers and magazines.
Recognition
1992: 46th Mystery Writers of Japan Award
1992: 11th Japan Adventure Fiction Association Prize
1993: 109th Naoki Prize (1993上)
1993: 12th Japan Adventure Fiction Association Prize
2006: 4th Shinran Prize
2009: 61st Yomiuri Prize
2017: 70th Noma Literary Prize
2017: 44th Jirō Osagari Prize
2018: 59th Mainichi Arts Award
Film and other adaptations
= Film
=Marks no yama, 1995
Lady Joker, 2004
= Television
=Marks no yama (Wowow, 2010)
Lady Joker (Wowow, 2013)
Works
Ōgon o daite tobe (黄金を抱いて翔ベ, Grab the Money and Run), 1990, Shinchosha, ISBN 9784103784012
Riviera o ute (リヴィエラを撃て, Shoot Riviera), 1992, Shinchosha, ISBN 9784106027284
Mākusu no yama (マークスの山, Marks' Mountain), 1993, Hayakawa Shobõ, ISBN 9784152035530
Redi joka (レディ・ジョーカー, Lady Joker), 1997, Mainichi Shimbun, ISBN 9784620105796
Haruko jōka (晴子情歌, Haruko's Love Song), 2002, Shinchosha, ISBN 9784103784029
Shin Ria-ō (新リア王, A New King Lear), 2005, Shinchosha, ISBN 9784103784043
Taiyō o hiku uma (太陽を曳く馬, The Horse that Pulls the Sun), 2009, Shinchosha, ISBN 9784103784067
Tsuchi no ki (土の記, Working the Earth), 2016, Shinchosha, ISBN 9784103784098
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Shigeo Tokuda
- Meguri
- Maria Ozawa
- Marina Shiraishi
- Maria Nagai
- Sora Aoi
- Tsukasa Aoi
- Anri Okita
- Hana Haruna
- Ai Kano
- Kaoru Takamura
- Takamura
- Kaoru
- Lady Joker
- Keigo Higashino
- 1953 in literature
- 1997 in literature
- Hiroshi Kamiya
- Japanese detective fiction
- List of Japanese women writers
No More Posts Available.
No more pages to load.