Toshiya Masuda

Toshinari Masuda (増田 俊也 Masuda Toshinari, November 8, 1966), better known as Toshiya Masuda, is a Japanese novelist, essayist and martial arts historian.

Toshiya Masuda

Biography

Born in the Aichi prefecture, Inoue studied at Hokkaido University, where he joined the judo team and competed in the prestigious Nanatei Judo league. In 1989, he graduated as a journalist, joining the Chunichi Shimbun in its sports section. His first novel, Shatun Higuma no Mori, earned a special mention in the Kono Mystery ga Sugoi! ceremony in 2006, making him a name in the ecological movements for its environmentalist themes.

In 2012, he published the non-fiction novel Kimura Masahiko wa Naze Rikidōzan o Korosa Nakatta no Ka (Why Masahiko Kimura Didn't Kill Rikidozan), covering the lives of Masahiko Kimura and Rikidozan and their relationship as well as the latter's death. The work won both the Soichi Oya Non-Fiction Prize and the Shincho Document Prize.[1] Masuda followed the next year with his own fictionalized autobiography, Nanatei Judo Ki, being nominated as a finalist for Kadokawa Shoten's Futaro Yamada Prize. In 2014, he published an essay originally written in 2009, VTJ Zenja no Nakai Yuki, about Yuki Nakai's mixed martial arts career.

His first three works have been adapted to manga by Shueisha, Futabasha and Shogakukan editorials.

Prizes

  • 2012 Soichi Oya Non-Fiction Prize --- Kimura Masahiko wa Naze Rikidōzan o Korosa Nakatta no Ka
  • 2012 Shincho Document Prize --- Kimura Masahiko wa Naze Rikidōzan o Korosa Nakatta no Ka'
  • 2012 Seiun Award --- Doseijin Shurai as part of the NOVA anthology
  • 2014 Nihon SF Taisho Award --- Doseijin Shurai as part of the NOVA anthology

Works

Fiction

  • Shatun Higuma no Mori (2006)
  • Doseijin Shurai (2012) - part of the 7º NOVA anthology

Non-fiction

  • Kimura Masahiko wa Naze Rikidōzan o Korosa Nakatta no Ka (2012)
  • Nanatei Judo Ki (2013)

Essays

  • VTJ Zenja no Nakai Yuki (2014)
  • Honto no Tsuyo sa to Wa Nani Ka (2016) - co-authored with Yuki Nakai
gollark: I think you would basically have to disassemble half the computer.
gollark: I think they're doing a case transplant and GPU upgrade.
gollark: I still have a box of spare cables from my build lying around, and the 3.5" HDD trays.
gollark: And sometimes you have proprietary form factors or not enough cables.
gollark: And to replace the CPU you need to swap the cooler and avoid bending pins.

References

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