Morio Kita
Morio Kita (北 杜夫 Kita Morio) was the pen name of Sokichi Saitō (斎藤 宗吉 Saitō Sōkichi, May 1, 1927 – October 24, 2011), a Japanese novelist, essayist, and psychiatrist.[1]
Kita attended Azabu High School, Matsumoto Higher School (now part of Shinshu University) and graduated from Tohoku University's School of Medicine.[2] He initially worked as a doctor at Keio University Hospital. Motivated by the collections of his father's poems and the books of German author Thomas Mann, he decided to become a novelist. He was the second son of poet Mokichi Saitō. Shigeta Saitō, his older brother, is also a psychiatrist. The essayist Yuka Saitō is his daughter.[3][4]
He has suffered from manic–depressive disorder since his middle age.[5]
Awards
- 1960: Akutagawa Prize, for the novel, In The Corner Of Night And Fog, which was about Nacht und Nebel, the campaign in Nazi Germany to catch anti-Nazi activists and members of resistance movements.
Bibliography
Incomplete - to be updated
Novels
- Ghosts (1954)
- The House of Nire. Translated by Dennis Keene. New York: Kodansha International. 1984. ISBN 0-87011-592-8. Briefly noted in The New Yorker 60/48 (January 14, 1985): p. 117
Essays
- Papa wa Tanoshii Sōutubyō (work with Yuka Saitō, Asahi Shimbun Company, ISBN 978-4022504999)
TV
- Nescafé Gold Blend CM (1974)
- Tetsuko no Heya (1980 and May 12, 2008 with Yuka Saitō)
References
- ↑ Novelist-essayist "Morio Kita dies at 84"
- ↑ "【旧制高校 寮歌物語】(6)教授にウケた北杜夫の珍答案". Sankei Shimbun. 2012-09-09. Retrieved 2012-10-20.(Japanese)
- ↑ "Novelist-essayist Morio Kita dies at 84". The Mainichi Daily News. 2011-10-26. Retrieved 2012-02-24.
- ↑ Lecture of Morio Kita and Yuka Saitō in Hokuto, Yamanashi, March 13, 2010 (Japanese)
- ↑ "【北杜夫さん死去】重厚な純文学と、ユーモア作品が同居". Sankei Shimbun. 2011-10-26. Retrieved 2012-02-24.(Japanese)
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