*** Welcome to piglix ***

Jinsei Tsuji

Hitonari Tsuji
辻仁成
Hitonari.Tsuji.Paris2.jpg
Hitonari living in Paris, 2016
Born (1959-10-04) October 4, 1959 (age 58)
Tokyo, Japan
Occupation Novelist, film director, composer, professor, editor
Nationality Japanese
Genre Historical fiction, romance, mystery
Notable works
Website
www.j-tsuji-h.com

Hitonari Tsuji (辻 仁成, Tsuji Hitonari, born October 4, 1959) is a Tokyo-born Japanese writer, composer, and film director. In his film and singing work he uses the name Jinsei Tsuji, an alternative reading of the Japanese writing of his name. He debuted as a writer in 1989. His books and stories have been bestsellers in Japan as well as overseas, with his work being translated into 20 languages and selling over ten million copies.

His books Calmi Cuori Appassionati Blu (1999) and Good Bye See You Someday (2001). He is also a film director and his masterpiece of films include Hotoke (ほとけ) (2001) and Filament (フイラメント) (2001) were officially presented at the 51st Berlin International Film Festival and the 37th Czech Karlovy Vary International Film Festival where he won the honorary awards.

He launched the web magazine Design Stories and became its chief editor in October 2016.

Tsuji was born in Tokyo in 1959. He debuted as a vocalist of the rock band ECHOS in 1985 and the original song "ZOO" reached over a million sales.

He was a professor at Kyoto University of Art and Design from 2007 to 2016.

His former wife is Japanese actress Kaho Minami, but the two have divorced. His second wife was Japanese actress Miho Nakayama. In 2003, he and his wife moved to Paris, France. They were divorced in 2014.

During the 1980s, Tsuji started seriously writing novels as a “Blank Generation” writer.

In 1989, his first novel, Pianissimo, won the 13th Subaru Prize for Literature (Subaru Bungaku Sho).

In 1997, he was awarded the 116th Akutagawa Prize for Kaikyo no Hikari (The Light from the Straits).

In 1999, he was awarded the Prix Femina Award, a prestigious French literary prize, in the foreign novel category, for the French translation of Le Boudda blanc (The White Buddha, or Hakubutsu, published by Mercure de France). He is the first Japanese writer to ever win the Prix Femina Award.


...
Wikipedia

...