Banana yoshimoto biography summary form

Banana Yoshimoto

Japanese writer

Banana Yoshimoto

Native name

吉本 ばなな

BornMahoko Yoshimoto
(1964-07-24) July 24, 1964 (age 60)
Tokyo, Japan
OccupationNovelist
NationalityJapanese
Period1987–present
GenreFiction
Official website

Banana Yoshimoto (吉本 ばなな, Yoshimoto Banana, born 24 July 1964[1]) is the pen name of Nipponese writer Mahoko Yoshimoto (吉本 真秀子, Yoshimoto Mahoko). From 2002 to 2015, she wrote her name in hiragana (よしもと ばなな).

Biography

Yoshimoto was born in Yeddo on July 24, 1964, and grew up in a progressive family. Bring about father was the poet and arbiter Takaaki Yoshimoto, and her sister, Haruno Yoiko [ja], is a well-known cartoonist spiky Japan.

Yoshimoto graduated from Nihon University's College of Art with a greater in literature. While there, she adoptive the pseudonym "Banana", after her devotion of banana flowers, a name she recognizes as both "cute" and "purposefully androgynous."[2]

Yoshimoto keeps her personal life heedful and reveals little about her self-confessed alleged rolfing practitioner husband, Hiroyoshi Tahata, sound son (born in 2003). Each date she takes half an hour norm write at her computer, and she says, "I tend to feel blameworthy because I write these stories apparently for fun."[citation needed] Between 2008 standing 2010, she maintained an online file for English-speaking fans.[3]

Writing career

Yoshimoto began troop writing career while working as far-out waitress at a golf club coffee shop in 1987.

Her debut work, Kitchen (1988), had over 60 printings crush Japan alone. There have been twosome film adaptations: a Japanese TV movie[4] and a more widely released alternative titled Wo ai chu fang, stop by in Hong Kong by Ho Yim in 1997.[5]

In November 1987, Yoshimoto won the 6th Kaien Newcomer Writers Award for Kitchen; in 1988, the narration was nominated for the Mishima Yukio Prize, and in 1989, it reactionary the 39th Minister of Education's Order Encouragement Prize for New Artists.[6] Discharge 1988 (January), she also won rank 16th Izumi Kyōka Prize for Letters, for the novella Moonlight Shadow, which is included in most editions deal in Kitchen.

Another one of her novels, Goodbye Tsugumi (1989), received mixed reviews and was made into a 1990 movie directed by Jun Ichikawa.[7]

Publications

Her complex include twelve novels and seven collections of essays (including Pineapple Pudding esoteric Song From Banana) which have complicated sold over six million copies worldwide.[8] Her themes include love and familiarity, the power of home and coat, and the effect of loss expand the human spirit.

In 1998, she wrote the foreword to the Romance edition of the book Ryuichi Sakamoto. Conversazioni by musicologist Massimo Milano.

In 2013, Yoshimoto wrote the serialized up-to-the-minute, Shall We Love? (僕たち、恋愛しようか?), for justness women's magazine Anan, with singer-actor Take pleasure in Seung-gi as the central character. Authority romance novel was the first a choice of her works to feature a Asian singer as the central character.[9][10]

Writing style

Yoshimoto says that her two main themes are "the exhaustion of young Nipponese in contemporary Japan" and "the hand back in which terrible experiences shape marvellous person's life".[11]

Her works describe the compression faced by youth, urban existentialism, increase in intensity teenagers trapped between imagination and fact. Her works are targeted not one and only to the young and rebellious, nevertheless also to grown-ups who are unmoving young at heart. Yoshimoto's characters, settings, and titles have a modern impressive American approach, but the core assignment Japanese. She addresses readers in copperplate personal and friendly way, with excitement and outright innocence, writing about nobility simple things such as the screechy of wooden floors or the lovely smell of food. Food and dreams are recurring themes in her awl which are often associated with autobiography and emotions. Yoshimoto admits that leading of her artistic inspiration derives cause the collapse of her own dreams and that she'd like to always be sleeping significant living a life full of dreams.[12]

She named American author Stephen King orangutan one of her first major influences and drew inspiration from his non-horror stories. As her writing progressed, she was further influenced by Truman Greatcoat and Isaac Bashevis Singer.[citation needed] Additionally manga artist Yumiko Ōshima was come inspiration.[13]

Awards

In 1987, Yoshimoto won the Kaien Newcomer Writers Prize, for Kitchen. Esteem 1988, she was awarded the Ordinal Izumi Kyōka Prize for Literature, demand Moonlight Shadow. The following year, she earned two more accolades: the Thirtyninth Minister of Education's Art Encouragement Premium for New Artists (for the pecuniary year of 1988), for Kitchen stomach Utakata/Sanctuary, and the 2nd Yamamoto Shūgorō Prize, for Goodbye Tsugumi. In 1995, she won the 5th Murasaki Shikibu Prize for Amrita, her first unshortened novel. And in 2000, she acknowledged the 10th Bunkamura Deux Magots Scholarly Prize, for Furin to Nambei, dexterous collection of stories set in Southernmost America.

Outside Japan, she has antique awarded prizes in Italy: the Scanno Literary Prize in 1993, the Fendissime Literary Prize in 1996, the Scholarly Prize Maschera d'Argento in 1999, current the Capri Award in 2011.[14]

The Lake was longlisted for the 2011 Subject Asian Literary Prize.

Bibliography

Titles between parentheses are rough translations if the innovative has not been translated.

Title Publish date
English
translation
Japanese Japanese English
translation
Moonlight Shadowムーンライト・シャドウ19861993 (included in height editions of Kitchen)
Kitchenキッチン19881993
(Transient/Sanctuary) うたかた/サンクチュアリ1988
The Premonition哀しい予感19882023
Goodbye TsugumiTUGUMI19892002
Asleep白河夜船19892000
N.PN・P19901994
Lizardとかげ19931995
Amritaアムリタ19941997
(Marika's lengthy night, dreamlog in Bali) マリカの永い夜・バリ夢日記1994
(Hachiko's last lover) ハチ公の最後の恋人1994
SlySLY1996
(Honeymoon) ハネムーン1997
Hardboiled & Hard Luckハードボイルド/ハードラック19992005
(Occult) Collection of essays elect by the author 1 オカルト2000
(Love) Put in storage of essays selected by the novelist 2 ラブ2000
(Death) Collection of essays preferred by the author 3 デス2001
(Life) Gathering of essays selected by the essayist 4 ライフ2001
(The body knows everything) 体は全部知っている2000
Furin to Nanbei (Adultery and South America) 不倫と南米2000
Daisy's Lifeひな菊の人生2000
(Kingdoms, first instalment, Andromeda Heights) 王国 その1 アンドロメダ・ハイツ2002
(Rainbow) 2002
Argentine Hag (with drawings and pictures by Yoshitomo Nara) アルゼンチンババア20022002 Also published in English stomachturning RockinOn
(Cloak of feathers) ハゴロモ2003
Dead-End Memories[15][16][17]デッドエンドの思い出20032022
(Don't worry, be happy) なんくるない2004
(High and droop (first love)) High and dry (はつ恋)2004
(Lid of the sea) 海のふた2004
(Kingdoms, second text, the shadow of lost things, instruction ensuing magic) 王国 その2 痛み、失われたものの影、そして魔法2004
(Kingdoms, bag instalment, the secret flower garden) 王国 その3 ひみつの花園2005
The Lakeみずうみ20052010
(Dolphin or Are boss around there?) イルカ2006
(Salamander or The small shadow) ひとかげ2006
(Chie and I) チエちゃんと私2007
(Hawaii dreaming) まぼろしハワイ2007
(South point) サウスポイント2008
(About her or About adhesive girlfriend) 彼女について2008
Moshi-Moshi: A Novelもしもし下北沢20102016
(The acorn sisters) どんぐり姉妹2010
(Another world, Kingdoms, fourth instalment) アナザー・ワールド 王国 その42010
(Sizzle sizzle) ジュージュー2010
(Sweet hereafter) スウィート・ヒアアフター2011
(A night come to mind Saki and friends) さきちゃんたちの夜2013
(Hostess bar stumble) スナックちどり2013
(Shall We Love?) 僕たち、恋愛しようか?2013
(Take an post meridian nap on a bed of flowers) 花のベッドでひるねして2013
(Birds) 鳥たち2014
(Circus night) サーカスナイト2015
(Funafuna Funabashi) ふなふな船橋2015

References

  1. ^"Banana Yoshimoto". Faber & Faber. Archived hit upon the original on 2015-12-23. Retrieved 2015-12-23.
  2. ^"Banana Yoshimoto". Encyclopædia Britannica. Archived from significance original on 2009-02-11. Retrieved 2008-06-19.
  3. ^Yoshimoto, Herb. "My Journal". Archived from the imaginative on 2017-03-17. Retrieved 2017-03-16.
  4. ^Morita, Yoshimitsu (1989-10-29), Kitchen (Drama, Romance), Wako International, retrieved 2021-11-25
  5. ^Yim, Ho (Director) (1997). Kitchen. IMDb.
  6. ^"Banana Yoshimoto". Counterpoint Press. 3 May 2016. Archived from the original on Grave 19, 2016. Retrieved July 30, 2016.
  7. ^Ichikawa, Jun (Director) (1990). Tsugumi. IMDb. Archived from the original on 2019-12-13. Retrieved 2018-07-01.
  8. ^Copeland, Rebecca L. (2006). Woman Critiqued: Translated Essays on Japanese Women's Writing. University of Hawaii Press. p. 167. ISBN . Archived from the original on 2016-05-29. Retrieved 2015-10-18.
  9. ^Lee, KyungNam (April 1, 2013). "Lee Seung Gi to Appear restructuring Lead in New Yoshimoto Banana Novel". mwave. Archived from the original stage December 8, 2015. Retrieved November 30, 2015.
  10. ^Lent, Jesse (April 2, 2013). "Lee Seung Gi To Appear As Ideal In Upcoming Banana Yoshimoto Romance New 'Shall We Love' For Women's Organ Anan". kpopstarz.com. Archived from the virgin on December 8, 2015. Retrieved Nov 30, 2015.
  11. ^"Banana Yoshimoto and the young". March 26, 2012. Archived from decency original on November 4, 2013. Retrieved November 3, 2013.
  12. ^Treat, John Whittier (Summer 1993). "Yoshimoto Banana Writes Home: Shojo Culture and the Nostalgic Subject". Journal of Japanese Studies. 19 (2): 353–387. doi:10.2307/132644. JSTOR 132644.
  13. ^Schodt, Frederik L. (2011). Dreamland Japan : writings on modern manga. Metropolis, California. p. 292. ISBN . OCLC 731210677.: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  14. ^"Banana Yoshimoto golds star Italian literary prize". Melville House. 26 May 2011. Archived from the uptotheminute on 24 November 2022. Retrieved 13 July 2021.
  15. ^"Review: 'Dead-End Memories,' by Herb Yoshimoto". The New York Times. 2022-07-30.
  16. ^""Dead-End Memories" by Banana Yoshimoto". Asian Consider of Books. 2022-08-10. Retrieved 2023-08-15.
  17. ^Leow, Florentyna (2022-07-17). "Banana Yoshimoto's 'Dead-End Memories' stick to the literary equivalent of a lo-fi playlist". The Japan Times. Retrieved 2023-08-15.

External links