Atsuko Asano (writer)

Atsuko Asano (Japanese: あさの あつこ, Hepburn: Asano Atsuko, born 1954 in Okayama Prefecture[1][2]) is a Japanese writer. She wrote the children's novel series Telepathy Shōjo Ran and the manga series The Manzai Comics.[3] She started writing children's novels when she was in college. She graduated from Aoyama Gakuin University with the Bachelor of Letters degree.[4] After that, she worked as a temporary teacher of the elementary school in Okayama for two years.[5] She published Hotarukan monogatari as her first novel in 1991.[1][6] She is married to a dentist and they have two sons and a daughter.

Atsuko Asano
Born (1954-09-14) September 14, 1954
Mimasaka-cho, Aida District (now Mimasaka city),
Okayama Prefecture, Japan
OccupationAuthor, novelist
NationalityJapan
Alma materAoyama Gakuin University
Period1991–present
GenreChildren's literature, period novel

Asano received the Noma Prize for Juvenile Literature in 1997 for the book series Battery,[1] which has been adapted into a film.[7] The same series won the Shogakukan Children's Publication Culture Award in 2005.[1] Her work frequently appears in literary magazines and she has also been featured in the Mainichi Shimbun.[8]

She likes reading mystery novels. One of her favorite mystery novels is Cat of Many Tails, written by Ellery Queen.

She is a supporter of the Japanese Communist Party (JCP).[9]

Works

  • "Kamigami no Utatane"
  • "Girls Blue 2"
  • "Girls Blue"
  • "Yume Utsutsu"
  • "The Manzai Comics #1–6"
  • "Asano Kodomo no Omochabako"
  • "Neko no Neko-san"
  • "Telepathy Shōjo Ran"
  • "Arifureta Fūkeiga"
  • "Sasayaka na Monogatari-tachi"
  • "Kimi ni Okuru Tsubasa Monogatari"
  • "Matteru"
  • "Last Inning"
  • "Kaze no Yakata no Monogatari"
  • "Ashita Fukukaze"
  • "Shin Hotarukan Monogatari"
  • "Hotarukan Monogatari"
  • "Iede de Densha wa Ganbarimasu"
  • "Miroku no Tsuki"
  • "Erina no Aoi Sora"
  • "Vivace"
  • "Kimi ga Mitsukeru Monogatari"
  • "Miyama Monogatari"
  • "Fukushū Planner"
  • "Konjiki no Nobe ni Utau"
  • "Battery #1–7"
  • "Field, wind"
  • "Tabidachi"
  • "Chūgakusei no Kimochi"
  • "Iede Densha wa Koshōchu?"
  • "Yōkai Henka"
  • "Jūni no Uso to Jūni no Shinjitsu"
  • "Yasha-zakura"
  • "Jūni-sai Deai no Kisetsu"
  • "Banka no Playball"
  • "Runner"
  • "Fukuin no Shōnen"
  • "Sugu Kakeru Dokushō Kansōbun"
  • "Nani yori mo Taisetsu na Koto"
  • "Bokura no Shinrei Spotto"
  • "Natsu-yasumi"
  • "Chi ni Umorete"
  • "Jikū Hunter Yuki"
  • "Hint?"
  • "Tōmei na Tabiji to"
  • "Tanpopo Akichi no Tsukinowa"
  • "Dobapyon"
  • "Love Letter"
  • "Mai wa Jussai desu"
  • "No. 6"
gollark: Current solar is 40% efficient. There's not a huge way to go.
gollark: There are limits.
gollark: You need to cover vast areas of land with them to get decent output, plus the giant batteries.
gollark: Not BETTER.
gollark: And really, nuclear is a lot better than carbondioxidey fossil fuels.

References

  1. "Battery(6 volumes)." Japanese Board on Books for Young People. Retrieved on February 26, 2009.
  2. "「バッテリー 1~6」 あさのあつこさん." Yomiuri Online. February 22, 2005. Retrieved on February 26, 2009.
  3. "Telepathy Shōjo Ran Novels Animated for TV in Japan." Anime News Network. December 26, 2007. Retrieved on February 26, 2009.
  4. バッテリー あさのあつこ. April 2006. Retrieved on October 15, 2009.
  5. 『あさのあつこ完全読本』2005年 河出書房新社
  6. あさのあつこ カドカワード.jp Archived February 27, 2012, at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved on October 15, 2009.
  7. "バッテリー Archived July 6, 2008, at the Wayback Machine." Variety Japan. Retrieved on February 26, 2009.
  8. ""Take the test for your favorite school". Mainichi Shimbun, February 11, 2009. Retrieved on February 26, 2009.
  9. "だから私は日本共産党/作家/あさのあつこさん – YouTube" (in Japanese). Japanese Communist Party Official Channel – YouTube. April 19, 2012. Retrieved April 12, 2016.
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