Ōtarō Maijō
{{Short description|Japanese writer (born 1973)}}
{{Infobox writer
| name = Ōtarō Maijō
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| birth_date = {{Birth year and age|1973|}}
| birth_place = Fukui Prefecture, Japan
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| occupation = Novelist, short-story writer, translator
| language = Japanese
| period = 2001–present
| genre = Fiction, crime fiction, thriller
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| awards = Mephisto Prize (2001)
Mishima Prize (2003)
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{{Nihongo|Ōtarō Maijō|舞城 王太郎|Maijō Ōtarō|born 1973}} is a Japanese novelist from Fukui Prefecture. Winner of the 19th Mephisto Prize for Smoke, Soil, or Sacrifices, and the 16th Mishima Yukio Prize for Asura Girl. His short story, "Drill Hole in the Brain" was translated into English as part of Del Rey's Faust anthology, and described by the Anime News Network as the "crowning glory" of the anthology.{{cite web|url=http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/review/faust-anthology/vol-1|title=Faust Vol. 1 Review|publisher=Anime News Network|accessdate=January 22, 2010}}
Style
Many of Maijō's novels are set in Fukui and make extensive use of that dialect. He is known for an aggressive, colloquial writing style. His early works were mystery novels, but he has branched out into literary magazines. He illustrates much of his own work, and has contributed several brief manga to Faust.
Works in English translation
;Novel
- Asura Girl, trans. Stephen Snyder (Haikasoru, 2014)
;Short story
- "Drill Hole in the Brain" (Faust 1. Del Rey, 2008. {{ISBN|034550206X}})
Awards and nominations
- 2001 – Mephisto Prize: Kemuri ka Tsuchi ka Kuimono (Smoke, Soil or Sacrifices) (Novel)
- 2003 – Mishima Yukio Prize: Asura Girl (Novel)
- 2003 – Nominee for Mystery Writers of Japan Award for Best Short Story: "Pikōn!"
- 2004 – Nominee for Akutagawa Prize: Suki Suki Daisuki Cho Ai shiteru (Love Love Love You, I Love You)[http://www.nippon-foundation.or.jp/en/what/projects/readjapan/list_fiction/translation/fiction/fiction_025.html Love Love Love You, I Love You | The Nippon Foundation] (Novella)
- 2009 – Nominee for Akutagawa Prize: Bitch Magnet (Novella)
- 2012 – Nominee for Akutagawa Prize: Tanpen Gobosei (Short-Story Pentagram) (Five short stories)
- 2013 – Nominee for Akutagawa Prize: "Oishii Shawa Heddo" (Dainty Shower Head) (Short story)
Works<ref name="Kodansha Works">{{cite web|url=http://shop.kodansha.jp/bc2_bc/search_tyosha.jsp?ty=9044&x=B|title=Maijo Otaro Works|publisher=[[Kodansha]]|language=Japanese|accessdate=January 22, 2010}}</ref><ref name="Shinchosha Works">{{cite web|url=http://www.shinchosha.co.jp/writer/2775/|title=Maijo Otaro Works|publisher=[[Shinchosha]]|language=Japanese|accessdate=January 22, 2010}}</ref>
=Novels=
- Smoke, Soil or Sacrifices (Kemuri ka Tsuchi ka Kuimono) 2001 (Kodansha novels), 2004 (bunko)
- The Childish Darkness (Kurayami no Naka de Kodomo) 2001 (Kodansha novels)
- The World is Made Out of Closed Rooms (Sekai wa Misshitsu de Dekiteiru) 2001 (Kodansha novels), 2005 (bunko)
- an Asura-Girl in Love (Ashura Gāru), 2003 (Shinchosha), 2005 (bunko)
- "Kawa wo Oyoide Wataru Hebi" (short story, appeared in Shincho Magazine 2003, appeared only in the bunko edition of an Asura-Girl in Love)
- Tsukumo Juku, 2005 (Kodansha novels), 2007 (bunko)
- Set in the world of Ryusui Seiryoin's JDC novels
- Yama n Naka no Shimitomo Naruo, 2003 (Kodansha), 2005 (Kodansha novels), 2007 (bunko)
- Originally appeared in Gunzou, July 2003
- Love Love Love You I Love You! (Suki Suki Daisuki Cho Ai shiteru) 2004 (Kodansha), 2006 (Kodansha novels)
- Suki Suki Daisuki Cho Ai Shiteru (Gunzou, January 2004)
- "Drill Hole in My Brain" (Faust), 2003 vol. 1
- Speedboy, (Kodansha Box, 2006)
- Disco Detective Wednesday[http://sugoi-japan.jp/en/nominees/entame/e08_dexi.html Disco★Wednessdayyy | SUGOI JAPAN] (2008)
- Bitch Magnet (2009)
- Kemono no Ki (2010)
- NECK (2010)
- Makai Tantei Meiosei O: Dead Doll no Double D (2010)
- JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Jorge Joestar, (Shueisha, 2012)
=Short story collections=
- Kuma no Basho (short story collection; 2004 (Kodansha novels), 2006 (bunko)
- Kuma no Basho (appeared in Gunzou magazine, September 2001)
- Bat Otoko (Gunzou, February 2002)
- Pikōn! (later adapted into a manga by Kei Aoyama)
- Minna Genki, 2004 (Shinchosha), 2007 (bunko - in two volumes, Minna Genki and School Attack Syndrome)
- Minna Genki, (Shincho, September 2004)
- Dead for Good
- Wagaya no Totoro (Shincho, June 2003)
- Ya wo Tomeru Gowa no Kuchinashidori (Shincho, June 2004)
- School Attack Syndrome (Shincho, January 2004)
- Ikiru Kisu (2010)
- Tanpen Gobosei (2012)
- Kimitopia (2013)
=Translations=
- Thom Jones –Cold Snap (short story collection)
=Manga=
- PICCCCCOHHHNNN! (Illustrated by Kei Aoyama, 2007)
- Biorg Trinity (Illustrated by Oh! Great, 2012-2017)
- Spotless Love: This Love Cannot Be Any More Beautiful. (Illustrated by Arata Momose, 2019-2020)
- ID: INVADED #BRAKE BROKEN (Illustrated by Yūki Kodama, 2019-2020)
=Anime=
- Giant God Warrior Appears in Tokyo (Co-Written with Hideaki Anno)
- The Dragon Dentist{{cite web |url=http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2016-08-26/evangelion-studio-turns-dragon-dentist-short-into-its-1st-tv-special/.105795 |title=Evangelion's Studio Turns 'Dragon Dentist' Short Into Its 1st TV Special |date=August 26, 2016 |website=Anime News Network |accessdate=August 26, 2016 }}
- HammerHead
- ID: Invaded{{cite web |url=https://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2019-07-04/ei-aoki-otaro-maijo-work-on-id-invaded-original-anime-project/.148613 |title=Ei Aoki, Otaro Maijo Work on ID: INVADED Original Anime Project |date=July 4, 2019 |website=Anime News Network |accessdate=July 4, 2019 }}
- Special Kid Factory{{cite web|title=Sabikui Bisco & ID: INVADED Team Reunite for 2023 Sci-Fi Detective Anime Special Kid Factory|url=https://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2023-03-23/sabikui-bisco-and-id-invaded-team-reunite-for-2023-sci-fi-detective-anime-special-kid-factory/.196321|website=Anime News Network|last=Pineda|first=Rafael|date=March 24, 2023|access-date=March 24, 2023}}
Real Coffee
Currently, Otaro Maijo is part of the [http://www.realcoffee.jp/ Real Coffee Project], which, according to their website, is attempting to inspire new and better Japanese movies. Maijo has written and illustrated a number of flash movies, which are hosted on the website.
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- [http://www.booksfromjapan.jp/authors/item/770-otaro-maijo Otaro Maijo] at J'Lit Books from Japan {{in lang|en}}
- [http://www.jlpp.go.jp/en/works/05_11.html Synopsis of Asura Girl (Ashura Garu)] at JLPP (Japanese Literature Publishing Project) {{in lang|en}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Maijo, Otaro}}
Category:20th-century Japanese novelists
Category:21st-century Japanese novelists
Category:Japanese male short story writers
Category:Japanese mystery writers
Category:Yukio Mishima Prize winners
Category:21st-century Japanese translators
Category:English–Japanese translators
Category:20th-century Japanese short story writers
Category:21st-century Japanese short story writers