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Hiroshi Sakurazaka
Japanese writer

Hiroshi Sakurazaka

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Japanese writer
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Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Tokyo
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Hiroshi Sakurazaka (桜坂 洋, Sakurazaka Hiroshi, born 1970) is a Japanese author of science fiction and fantasy light novels. He is best known for his novel All You Need Is Kill, which formed the basis of Edge of Tomorrow, featuring Tom Cruise.

Life and career

Sakurazaka He originally began in a career in IT. He made his literary debut in 2002 at the second Super Dash Novel Rookie of the Year Award with Mahō tsukai no netto, which was later published in December 2003 under the name Yoku Wakaru Gendai Mahō. This work has subsequently been expanded into a series of light novels and has also been made into an anime. In 2004 he was presented the S-F Magazine Readers Award's best short story award for "The Saitama Chain Saw Massacre". His 2004 novel All You Need Is Kill, received high praise from other authors in Japan and has subsequently been published in English by Viz Media.

Sakurazuka has an interest in computers and video games. He is quite knowledgeable about computer culture, can program in Perl, is able to use specialized text editors such as Meadow and can typeset in TeX.

He has also collaborated with cultural critic Hiroki Azuma on the works Geet State (ギートステイト) and Characters (キャラクターズ) and has written a critique of Yasutaka Tsutsui's novel Dancing Vanity.

Film adaptation

Sakurazaka's novel All You Need is Kill was optioned by Warner Bros., and based upon the story, the screenplay was written by Dante Harper and Joby Harold with a working title We Mortals Are. Originally Brad Pitt was approached to play the lead, but he had conflicts with other films for which Warner wanted him. In October 2011, Tom Cruise began talks for the project to be directed by Doug Liman. In June 2014 the movie premiered with the title Edge of Tomorrow.

Awards

  • 2004: S-F Magazine Readers Award Best Short Story for "The Saitama Chain Saw Massacre" (Saitama Chainsaw Shōjo さいたまチェーンソー少女)
    • English translation of this short story was included in the anthology Hanzai Japan (Haikasoru, 2015).

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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