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Nahoko Uehashi

Nahoko Uehashi (上橋 菜穂子 Uehashi Nahoko?)
Born (1962-07-15) July 15, 1962 (age 54)
Tokyo, Japan
Occupation Writer, ethnologist
Nationality Japanese
Genre Fantasy, children's literature
Notable works Moribito: Guardian of the Spirit
Notable awards Noma Children's Literature New Face Prize (1996),
Noma Children's Literature award (2004),
Sankei Children's Culture and Publishing award,
Mildred L. Batchelder Award (2009),
Hans Christian Andersen Award (2014)

Nahoko Uehashi (上橋 菜穂子 Uehashi Nahoko?) (born July 15, 1962 in Tokyo, Japan) is a Japanese writer, primarily of fantasy books, for which she has won many awards.

Uehashi is also Professor of Ethnology at Kawamura Gakuen Women's University, having completed a PhD focusing on the Yamatji, an indigenous Australian people.

Uehashi's career as a writer started in 1989. Her first book was The Sacred Tree (精霊の木 seirei no ki?). She then wrote the novel O God, Sleep Ye in The Forest of Moon (月の森にカミよ眠れ tsuki no mori ni kami yo nemure?). This novel received an award from the Japanese Association of Writers for Children, which made her one of the famous Japanese-fantasy authors.

In 1996, she published the first book of her Moribito series, Guardian of the Spirit (精霊の守り人 Seirei no Moribito?). The novel received the Noma Children's Literature New Face Prize and the Sankei Children's Culture and Publishing award and the English translation was awarded the Mildred L. Batchelder Award in 2009. In 1999, Uehashi published the second book of the Moribito series, Guardian of the Darkness (闇の守り人 Yami no Moribito?). With this novel she received the Japanese Association of Writers for Children's award. In 2002 The Guardian series won the Iwaya Sazanami literature award, and in 2003, Guardian of the God (神の守り人 Kami no Moribito?) won another Japanese award from the Shogakukan publishing company. Then, in 2003, Uehashi wrote the novel Beyond the Fox Whistle (狐笛のかなた Koteki no Kanata?), which received a Noma Children's Literature award. In 2006 she wrote the two volume Kemono no Sōja (獣の奏者?, lit. "The Beast Player"), which she complemented with two more volumes in 2009.


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