Kenjirō Tokutomi

Japanese writer
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroJapanese writer
A.K.A.Tokutomi Roka
A.K.A.Tokutomi Roka
PlacesJapan
wasWriter Novelist
Work fieldLiterature
Gender
Male
Birth25 October 1868, Minamata
Death18 September 1927 (aged 58 years)
The details

Biography

Kenjirō Tokutomi (徳富 健次郎, Tokuyomi Kenjirō, December 8, 1868 in Minamata, Japan - September 18, 1927, in Ikaho) was a Japanese writer and philosopher. He was the younger brother of historian Tokutomi Sohō. He wrote novels under the pseudonym of Roka Tokutomi (徳冨 蘆花), many of which were translated into a number of languages including English, French, and German. He corresponded with Leo Tolstoy. A copy of a letter is on display in the small museum located in the Roka Kōshun-en Park, along with belongings.
One of his most famous novels is Hototogisu (English translation: The Cuckoo).
From February 27, 1907, until his death, he lived in a house in Musashino (Setagaya, Tokyo, Japan). At his wife's death the property was donated to the City of Tokyo to be used as a park. It was named Roka Kōshun-en in his honor.

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