Aiko Satō (writer)

Aiko Satō (佐藤 愛子, Satō Aiko, born 5 November 1923) is a Japanese novelist.

Biography

The novelist Aiko Satō was born in Osaka in 1923. She is the second daughter of the novelist Kōroku Satō [ja] and the agnate half-sister of the poet Hachirō Satō [ja].

Satō graduated the Kōnan Higher Girls' School (the precursor to the modern Konan Girls' Junior and Senior High School [ja][citation needed]).

Works

Satō published early works in the magazine Bungei Shuto (文芸首都). She wrote an autobiographical novel, Aiko (愛子, 1959), which she followed eight years later with a biography of her father entitled Hana wa Kurenai (花はくれない, "The Flowers Are Red", 1967) and seven years after that with a book about her mother, Joyū Mariko (女優万里子, "The Actress Mariko", 1974).

Her works Sokuratesu no Tsuma (ソクラテスの妻, "Socrates' Wife") and Futari no Onna (二人の女, "Two Women"), both published in 1963, earned a nomination for the Akutagawa Prize, and Kanō Taii Fujin (加納大尉婦人, published 1964) was nominated for the Naoki Prize. She won the 61st Naoki Prize for Tatakai-sunde Hi ga Kurete (闘いすんで日が暮れて), which portrays a woman's struggles with her incapable husband.

Notes

  1. ^ Also titled Hana wa Kurenai: Shōsetsu Satō Kōryoku (花は紅―小説佐藤紅緑, "The Flowers Are Red: A Novel on Satō Kōryoku").

This page was last updated at 2023-11-14 01:01 UTC. Update now. View original page.

All our content comes from Wikipedia and under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.


Top

If mathematical, chemical, physical and other formulas are not displayed correctly on this page, please useFirefox or Safari