/ Stars that died in 2023: Sakyo Komatsu, Japanese science fiction writer, died from pneumonia he was , 80.

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Sakyo Komatsu, Japanese science fiction writer, died from pneumonia he was , 80.

Sakyo Komatsu was a Japanese science fiction writer and screenwriter died from pneumonia he was , 80.. He was one of the most well known and highly regarded science fiction writers in Japan.

(January 28, 1931 – July 26, 2011)

Early life

Born Minoru "Sakyo" Komatsu in Osaka, he was a graduate of Kyoto University where he studied Italian literature.[3] After graduating, he worked at various jobs, including as a magazine reporter and a writer for stand-up comedy acts.[4]

Career

Komatsu's writing career began in the 1960s. Reading Kōbō Abe and Italian classics made Komatsu feel modern literature and science fiction are the same.
In 1961, he entered a science-fiction writing competition: "Peace on Earth" was a story in which World War II does not end in 1945 and a young man prepares to defend Japan against the Allied invasion. Komatsu received an honourable mention and 5000 yen.[5]
He won the same competition the following year with the story, "Memoirs of an Eccentric Time Traveller". His first novel, The Japanese Apache, was published two years later and sold 50,000 copies.
In the West he is best known for the novels Japan Sinks (1973) and Sayonara Jupiter (1982). Both were adapted to film, Tidal Wave (1973) and Bye Bye Jupiter (1984). The story "The Savage Mouth" was translated by Judith Merril and has been anthologized.
At the time of publication, his apocalyptic vision of a sunk Japan wiped out by shifts incurred through geographic stress" worried a Japan still haunted by the atomic devastation of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. He was inspired to write it thinking of what would happen if the nationalistic Japanese lost their land, and ironically prefigured the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami that triggered a nuclear plant disaster decades later on March 11, 2011 - the result of which he was interested in "to see how Japan would evolve" after the catastrophe.[5]
Komatsu was involved in organizing the Japan World Exposition in Osaka Prefecture in 1970.[4] In 1984, Komatsu served as a technical consultant for a live concert in Linz, Austria by Japanese electronic composer Isao Tomita. He won the 1985 Nihon SF Taisho Award.[6] Komatsu was one of two Author Guests of Honor at Nippon 2007, the 65th World Science Fiction Convention in 2007 in Yokohama, Japan. This was the first Worldcon to be held in Asia.
With Shin'ichi Hoshi and Yasutaka Tsutsui, Komatsu was considered one of the masters of Japanese science fiction.[5]

Death

Ironically, Komatsu died shortly after the destruction that followed the themes of his first and hugely successful novel. In the issue of his quarterly magazine published on July 21, Komatsu said he hoped to see how his country would evolve after the catastrophe. "I had thought I wouldn't mind dying any day," he wrote. "But now I'm feeling like living a little bit longer and seeing how Japan will go on hereafter."[5] He died five days after publication, aged 80.

Works

This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
Novels
  • Apache Japan
  • Japan Sinks (1973)
  • Bye Bye Jupiter (さよならジュピター Sayonara Jupitā?) (1982)
  • Tokyo Blackout (首都消失, The Capital Vanishes) (1985)
  • Blue Space Adventure (1985)
  • Virus (復活の日, The Day of Resurrection)(1964)
  • Kyomu Kairo (Nihilistic Corridor) (1999)
  • Espy (2000)
  • Flow Innocent Fruit (2000)
  • Flying City 008 : Tale of Aozora City (2003)
  • Homework Given by Alien (宇宙人のしゅくだ Uchūjin no Shukudai?)(2004)
Reviews, talks, and essays
Manga
Film
TV programs

 

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