Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Nobuko Takagi

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Nationality
  
Japanese

Books
  
Translucent tree, HOKKAI

Movies
  
Mai Mai Miracle

Role
  
Author

Name
  
Nobuko Takagi


Nobuko Takagi Translucent Tree Nobuko Takagi Deborah Iwabuchi 9781934287149


Born
  
May 9, 1946 (age 77) Yamaguchi Prefecture, Japan (
1946-05-09
)

Notable works
  
Hikari idaku tomo yo (To a Friend Embracing the Light) Toko no ki

Notable awards
  
1984 Akutagawa Prize for To a Friend Embracing the Light 1999 Tanizaki Prize for Toko no ki

Nobuko Takagi (高樹 のぶ子 Takagi Nobuko, born April 9, 1946) is the pen-name of Nobuko Tsuruta, a Japanese author.

Nobuko Takagi ecximagesamazoncomimagesI51KABXFCR9Ljpg

Takagi was born in Yamaguchi Prefecture, graduated from the Junior College of Tokyo Woman's Christian University (now Tokyo Woman's Christian University), and first published in 1980 with Sono hosoki michi (That Narrow Road). It was nominated for the Akutagawa Prize, as were her subsequent stories Tôsugiru tomo (A Distant Friend, 1981), Oikaze (A Following Wind, 1982), and Hikari idaku tomo yo (To a Friend Embracing the Light, 1983), which won the prize. Other works include Ginga no shizuku (Drops Falling from the Milky Way, 1993) and Tsuta moe (The Burning Vine, 1994).

Takagi's main interest lies in exploring the themes of romantic love in many forms, including innocent love, married love, extramarital affairs, and love triangles. She is currently a Special Guest Professor at Kyushu University.

"Will O' Wisp" (Onibi), a short story first published in Japanese in 2002 (Bungei-bunko), appears in English translation in Skyward, the Japan Airline inflight magazine, June, 2003.

The 2009 movie Mai Mai Miracle is based upon the novelization of Takagi's autobiography, Maimai Shinko.

Major prizes

  • 1984 Akutagawa Prize for Hikari idaku tomo yo (To a Friend Embracing the Light)
  • 1994 Shimase Literary Prize for Love Stories for Tsuta-moe
  • 1999 Tanizaki Prize for Tokō no ki (透光の樹)
  • References

    Nobuko Takagi Wikipedia