Tamaki Daido
Japanese writer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tamaki Daido (大道 珠貴, Daidō Tamaki, born 1966) is a Japanese writer. She has won the Kyushu Arts Festival Literary Prize, the Bunkamura Deux Magots Literary Prize, and the Akutagawa Prize.
Tamaki Daido | |
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Native name | 大道 珠貴 |
Born | 1966 (age 58–59) Fukuoka, Japan |
Occupation | Novelist, essayist |
Language | Japanese |
Genre | |
Notable works |
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Notable awards |
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Early life and education
Daido was born in Fukuoka, Japan and graduated from Fukuoka Central High School.[1] Her father worked for the Japan Self-Defense Forces.[2] She worked as a radio scriptwriter for several years before focusing on writing novels.[3]
Career
In 2000 her first published story Hadaka (裸, Naked) won the Kyushu Arts Festival Literary Prize and was nominated for the Akutagawa Prize, but did not win.[2][4] Two years later, after three more Akutagawa Prize nominations, Daido won the 128th Akutagawa Prize for Shoppai doraibu (しょっぱいドライブ, Salty Drive), a novel about a relationship between a younger woman and older man.[5][3] In 2005 Taeko Tomioka selected Daido as the winner of the Bunkamura Deux Magots Literary Prize for Kizuguchi ni wa uokka (傷口にはウオッカ, Vodka for Wounds).[6] An English translation of her short story "Milk" was published in the 2006 anthology "Inside" and Other Short Fiction.[7] Since 2011 Daido has contributed a regular column to the Asahi Shimbun.[8][9]
Daido has never married, and has claimed that marriage, children, or any particular sexual preference would constrain her ability to live her own life.[1][2][10]
Recognition
- 2000 30th Kyushu Arts Festival Literary Prize[11]
- 2003 128th Akutagawa Prize (2002下)[12]
- 2005 Bunkamura Deux Magots Literary Prize[13]
Works
In Japanese
- Somuko ko (背く子), Kodansha, 2001, ISBN 9784062102957
- Hadaka (裸, Naked), Bungeishunjū, 2002, ISBN 9784163213408
- Shoppai doraibu (しょっぱいドライブ, Salty Drive), Bungeishunjū, 2003, ISBN 9784163217604
- Gin no sara ni kin no ringo o (銀の皿に金の林檎を), Futabasha, 2003, ISBN 9784575234664
- Hisashiburi ni sayõnara (ひさしぶりにさようなら), Kodansha, 2003, ISBN 9784062119269
- Miruku (ミルク, Milk), Chuokoron-Shinsha, 2004, ISBN 9784120035685
- Suteki (素敵, Lovely), Kobunsha, 2004, ISBN 9784334924485
- Kizuguchi ni wa uokka (傷口にはウオッカ, Vodka for Wounds), Kodansha, 2005, ISBN 9784062127387
- Tama tama-- (たまたま--), Asahi Shimbunsha, 2005, ISBN 9784022500212
- Ushiromuki de arukō (後ろ向きで步こう), Bungeishunjū, 2005, ISBN 9784163241807
- Hana to umi (ハナとウミ), Futabasha, 2005, ISBN 9784575235357
- Kesaran pasaran (ケセランパサラン), Shōgakukan, 2006, ISBN 9784093861700
- Chõ ka ga ka (蝶か蛾か, Butterfly or Moth?), Bungeishunjū, 2006, ISBN 9784163256009
- Oni ga kita (オニが来た), Kobunsha, 2007, ISBN 9784334925352
- Shokkingu pinku (ショッキングピンク, Shocking Pink), Kodansha, 2007, ISBN 9784062142427
- Rippa ni narimashitaka (立派になりましたか?), Futabasha, 2008, ISBN 9784575236019
- Kireigoto (きれいごと), Bungeishunjū, 2011, ISBN 9784163810508
- Bonnō no ko (煩悩の子), Futabasha, 2015, ISBN 9784575238990
In English
- "Milk", trans. Louise Heal Kawai, "Inside" and Other Short Fiction, 2006[14]
References
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