Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Kerri Sakamoto

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Kerri Sakamoto


Role
  
Novelist

Kerri Sakamoto wwwyorkucayfilephotos20050211sakamoto2jpg

Movies
  
Strawberry Fields, Buffalo Death Mask

Books
  
The electrical field, One hundred million hearts, La fille du kamikaze

Nominations
  
Governor General's Award for English-language fiction

Similar People
  
Ook Chung, Rea Tajiri, James Lyons, Mike Hoolboom

Kerri Sakamoto (born 1960) is a Canadian novelist. Her novels commonly deal with the experience of Japanese Canadians.

Kerri Sakamoto httpsimagesrandomhousecomauthor26699

Sakamoto's debut novel, The Electrical Field (1998), won the Commonwealth Writers Prize for Best First Book. It also won the Canada-Japan Literary Award and was a finalist for a Governor General’s Award. Her second novel, One Hundred Million Hearts, was published in 2003. Both books have been published in translation internationally. She is at work on a third novel for which she received a Chalmers Fellowship. Sakamoto has given talks and readings and has participated in literary festivals in Canada, the United States, Europe and Asia.

Sakamoto is also known as a writer of screenplays and essays on visual art. She co-wrote (with director Rea Tajiri) the screenplay to the 1997 film, Strawberry Fields. She often collaborates with filmmakers as story editor or script editor on narrative, experimental and experimental documentary works. She has also written on visual art for museums and galleries in Canada and the United States, such as the Walter Phillips Gallery at the Banff Fine Arts Centre, the Whitney Museum of American Art, and the Honolulu Museum of Contemporary Art. In 2004, she contributed a catalogue essay on the work of Painters Eleven abstract expressionist Kazuo Nakamura for an exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ontario.

In 2005, Sakamoto was appointed the Barker Fairly Distinguished Visitor at the University of Toronto, and a member of the Toronto Arts Council in 2007.

References

Kerri Sakamoto Wikipedia