Kaoru Kitamura | |
---|---|
Born |
Sugito, Saitama, Japan |
December 28, 1949
Occupation | Writer |
Nationality | Japanese |
Genre | Mystery |
Kaoru Kitamura (北村 薫 Kitamura Kaoru?) (born December 28, 1949) is the pen name of Kazuo Miyamoto (宮本 和男 Miyamoto Kazuo?), a popular contemporary Japanese writer, mainly of short stories.
Kitamura was born in the town of Sugito in Saitama Prefecture. He studied literature at Waseda University in Tokyo, and was a member of the Waseda Mystery Club while a student there. However, after graduating from Waseda in 1972, he returned to Saitama to become a language teacher at Kasukabe High School, his alma mater. He began his fiction writing career only after teaching for almost twenty years, and stopped teaching in 1993 to devote himself completely to writing once established as an author.
He made his writing debut using a pen name. Initially, because the unnamed first-person protagonist of his early works was a female college student, and the name Kaoru is gender ambiguous, it was widely speculated that Kitamura was female. This speculation persisted until he revealed his identity upon accepting the Mystery Writers of Japan Award in 1991.
Kitamura is known as a writer of mysteries, and rather than the detective and crime stories of traditional mystery, his work mainly focuses on the logical resolution of more "ordinary" puzzles and questions encountered in everyday life. He is considered a pioneer of this style of mystery in Japan, called "everyday mystery" (日常の謎 nichijō no nazo?), which has since been taken up by many other writers.