peoplepill id: hiroko-oyamada-2
HO
Japan
2 views today
2 views this week
Hiroko Oyamada
Japanese writer

Hiroko Oyamada

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Japanese writer
Places
Work field
Gender
Female
Place of birth
Saeki-ku, Hiroshima, Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan
Age
41 years
Education
Hiroshima University
Awards
Akutagawa Prize
(2013)
Shinchō award for young writers
(2010)
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Hiroko Oyamada (小山田 浩子, Oyamada Hiroko, born 1983) is a Japanese writer. She has won the Shincho Prize for New Writers, the Oda Sakunosuke Prize, and the Akutagawa Prize.

Early life and education

Oyamada was born in Hiroshima and remained there throughout her school years, eventually graduating from Hiroshima University in 2006 with a degree in Japanese literature. After graduation Oyamada changed jobs three times in five years, an experience that inspired her debut story "Kōjō" ("Factory"), which received the 42nd Shincho Prize for New Writers in 2010. After her debut Oyamada worked a part-time editorial job at a local magazine, but quit after marrying a co-worker.

Career

In 2013 Oyamada won the 30th Oda Sakunosuke Prize for a short story collection containing "Kōjō" as the title story. Later that year Oyamada's novella Ana (Hole), about a woman who falls into a hole, was published in the literary magazine Shinchō. Ana won the 150th Akutagawa Prize. One of the Akutagawa Prize judges, author Hiromi Kawakami, commended Oyamada's ability to write about "fantasy in a reality setting." In 2014 Oyamada received the 5th Hiroshima Cultural Newcomer Award for her cultural contributions. In 2018 Oyamada's third book, a short story collection called Niwa (Garden), was published by Shinchosha.

An English edition of "Kōjō", translated by David Boyd, was published by New Directions Publishing under the title The Factory in 2019. Writing for The Wall Street Journal, Sam Sacks noted that the "tonal blandness" of the writing style matched the feeling of repetitive, meaningless office work. In a starred review of The Factory for Publishers Weekly, Gabe Habash praised Oyamada's ability to make the reader experience the same disorientation as the book's main character, concluding that the book would leave readers "reeling and beguiled".

Oyamada has cited Franz Kafka and Mario Vargas Llosa as literary influences. In his review of Granta's special issue on Japanese literature, James Hadfield of The Japan Times compared Oyamada's writing to that of Yōko Ogawa and said that her work "suggests good things to come from this promising young writer."

Oyamada lives in Hiroshima with her husband and daughter.

Recognition

  • 2010 42nd Shincho Prize for New Writers
  • 2013 30th Oda Sakunosuke Prize
  • 2014 150th Akutagawa Prize (2013下)

Works

In Japanese

  • Kōjō (Factory), Shinchosha, 2013, ISBN 9784103336419
  • Ana (Hole), Shinchosha, 2014, ISBN 9784103336426
  • Niwa (Garden), Shinchosha, 2018, ISBN 9784103336433

In English

  • "Spider Lilies", trans. Juliet Winters Carpenter, Granta 127, 2014
  • The Factory, trans. David Boyd, New Directions, 2019, ISBN 9780811228855
  • The Hole, trans. David Boyd, New Directions, 2020, ISBN 9780811228879
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
Lists
Hiroko Oyamada is in following lists
comments so far.
Comments
From our partners
Sponsored
Credits
References and sources
Hiroko Oyamada
arrow-left arrow-right instagram whatsapp myspace quora soundcloud spotify tumblr vk website youtube pandora tunein iheart itunes