Yumie Hiraiwa

Yumie Hiraiwa (平岩 弓枝, Hiraiwa Yumie, born 15 March 1932) is a Japanese Naoki Award-winning author.[1]

Yumie Hiraiwa in 1939

Life

The daughter of the chief priest of Yoyogi Hachiman shrine, Hiraiwa Yumie was born in Tokyo in 1932. After graduating from the Department of Japanese Literature at Japan Women's University, the aspiring author studied under novelist Togawa Yukio and became a member of Shinyo-kai, an organization to promote literature established in memory of novelist Hasegawa Shin. In 1959, her work Taganeshi (A Sword Name-Engraver) won the Naoki Award.

Works

Her representative works include the historical detective-story series Onyado Kawasemi (The Kawasemi Inn). Her works cover a wide range of genres, including historical and contemporary novels, mysteries, novels on adolescence and scripts for plays and TV dramas.[2] In 1987, she became a member of the selection committee for the Naoki Award.

gollark: ... why?
gollark: What do they do? How do you define a new function?
gollark: What are they?
gollark: Okay, what should the builtins and stuff be?
gollark: Ugh, I am going to need to totally rewrite the actual Soviet Forth language at this rate.

References

  1. Schierbeck, Sachiko Shibata; Edelstein, Marlene R. (1994). Japanese women novelists in the 20th century: 104 biographies, 1900-1993. Museum Tusculanum Press. p. 157. ISBN 87-7289-268-4.
  2. Ueda, Makoto (2004). The Mother of Dreams: Portrayals of Women in Modern Japanese Fiction. Kodansha International. p. 258. ISBN 4-7700-2976-4.


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