Yuya Sato | |
---|---|
Born | Chitose, Hokkaido, Japan | 7 December 1980
Occupation | Writer |
Language | Japanese |
Period | 2001–present |
Genre | Fiction, crime fiction, thriller, science fiction |
Notable awards |
Mephisto Prize (2001) Mishima Prize (2007) |
Yuya Sato (佐藤友哉, Satō Yūya, born 1980) is a Japanese novelist from Hokkaido Prefecture. He won the 21st Mephisto Prize for Flicker Style, [1] and the 20th Yukio Mishima Prize for 1000 Novels and Backbeard. [2] His works have been translated into English, Chinese and Korean. Sato's short story "Same As Always" was translated for The Penguin Book of Japanese Short Stories (2018), and has been described as "an acerbic meditation on the complex interplay of gender and nurturing in post-Fukushima Japan."
Kenzaburō Ōe, Kenji Nakagami and especially J. D. Salinger affected Sato's style.
This is a stand-alone short story and is also the first chapter of his Novel Gray-Colored Diet Coke. The title was named after Kenji Nakagami's Gray-Colored Coke.
Some of these books are not novels but collections of linked short stories.
Yuya Sato | |
---|---|
Born | Chitose, Hokkaido, Japan | 7 December 1980
Occupation | Writer |
Language | Japanese |
Period | 2001–present |
Genre | Fiction, crime fiction, thriller, science fiction |
Notable awards |
Mephisto Prize (2001) Mishima Prize (2007) |
Yuya Sato (佐藤友哉, Satō Yūya, born 1980) is a Japanese novelist from Hokkaido Prefecture. He won the 21st Mephisto Prize for Flicker Style, [1] and the 20th Yukio Mishima Prize for 1000 Novels and Backbeard. [2] His works have been translated into English, Chinese and Korean. Sato's short story "Same As Always" was translated for The Penguin Book of Japanese Short Stories (2018), and has been described as "an acerbic meditation on the complex interplay of gender and nurturing in post-Fukushima Japan."
Kenzaburō Ōe, Kenji Nakagami and especially J. D. Salinger affected Sato's style.
This is a stand-alone short story and is also the first chapter of his Novel Gray-Colored Diet Coke. The title was named after Kenji Nakagami's Gray-Colored Coke.
Some of these books are not novels but collections of linked short stories.