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Intro | Japanese artist and writer | ||
A.K.A. | Shin'ichi Hoshi Hoshi Shinichi Hoshi Shin'ichi Hoshi Shin’ichi | ||
A.K.A. | Shin'ichi Hoshi Hoshi Shinichi Hoshi Shin'ichi Hoshi Shin’ichi | ||
Places | Japan | ||
was | Writer Novelist | ||
Work field | Literature | ||
Gender |
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Birth | 6 September 1926, Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan | ||
Death | 30 December 1997Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan (aged 71 years) | ||
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Biography
Shinichi Hoshi (星 新一 Hoshi Shin'ichi, September 6, 1926 – December 30, 1997) was a Japanese novelist and science fiction writer. He is best known for his "short-short" science fiction stories, often no more than three or four pages in length, of which he wrote over 1000. He also wrote mysteries, and won the Mystery Writers of Japan Award for Mōsō Ginkō (Delusion Bank) in 1968.
One of his short stories, "Bokko-chan" ("Miss Bokko"), was translated into English and published in Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction in June 1963. His books translated into English include There Was a Knock, a collection of 15 stories, and The Spiteful Planet and Other Stories.
His friend Osamu Tezuka used his name for a character in Amazing 3, a cartoon series which Tezuka produced in 1967.
His grandmother on his mother's side, Kimiko Koganei, was the sister of Mori Ōgai.