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Japanese writer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Shion Miura (三浦 しをん, Miura Shion, born 1976) is a Japanese writer. She has won the Naoki Prize, the Oda Sakunosuke Prize, and the Japan Booksellers' Award. Her work has been adapted for film and television, and her books have been translated into Indonesian, Chinese, Korean, Vietnamese, English, German and Italian.
Shion Miura | |
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Native name | 三浦 しをん |
Born | 1976 (age 47–48) Tokyo, Japan |
Occupation | Novelist, essayist |
Language | Japanese |
Alma mater | Waseda University |
Genre | Fiction, essay |
Notable works |
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Notable awards |
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Miura was born in Tokyo, Japan in 1976.[1] While attending university she planned to become an editor, but she was signed by a literary agent and started her writing career.[2] She graduated from Waseda University.[3]
A year after graduating from Waseda, Miura published her first novel, Kakuto suru mono ni maru (A Passing Grade for Those Who Fight).[2] She won the 135th Naoki Prize in 2006 for her book Mahoro ekimae Tada benriken.[4] The novel and its sequels have been adapted into a series of movies by Tatsushi Ōmori,[5] a TV Tokyo television show,[6] and a manga series.[7] Her novel Kaze ga tsuyoku fuiteiru (Run with the Wind), about 2 former elite runners who inspire each other to take up running again, was published in 2006 and later adapted into a 2009 live-action film and a 2018 NTV animated series.[8] In 2008 her novel Hikari (Light), a story about rape, murder, and consequences over time, was published.[9] Hikari was adapted into a 2017 suspense film directed by Tatsushi Ōmori.[10][11]
Miura's novel Fune wo amu (Compiling the Boat), about a 15 year effort to create a new dictionary called The Great Passage, was published by Kobunsha in 2011.[12] In 2012 Fune wo amu won the Japan Booksellers' Award.[13] A 2013 film adaptation of Fune wo amu, directed by Yuya Ishii, won several Japan Academy Prizes, including Best Picture.[14] In 2016 Fuji TV adapted the novel into an anime series, also called Fune wo amu.[15] An English version of Fune wo amu, translated by Juliet Winters Carpenter, was published in 2017 under the title The Great Passage.[16] Kris Kosaka of The Japan Times described The Great Passage as "stylistically adept, with the shift in narratives smoothly connecting as characters’ stories overlap through time and space."[17]
In 2015 Miura's novel Ano ie ni kurasu yonin no onna, a story that loosely follows the setting and themes of Jun'ichirō Tanizaki's work The Makioka Sisters, won the 32nd Oda Sakunosuke Prize.[18][19]
Miura has cited Kenji Maruyama and Hideo Nakai as favorite authors.[1] She is a fan of BL manga, and a collection of her essays on yaoi was published under the title Shumi ja nainda (It's Not Just a Hobby) in 2006.[20]
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