Hiroshi Sano

Hiroshi Sano (22 May 1928 – 27 April 2013) was the pen name of a Japanese mystery writer and critic. His real name is Ichiro Maruyama.

Biography

Hiroshi Sano was born in Tokyo City, Omori (now Tokyo, Ota-ku, Omori). In 1953, he graduated from the University of Tokyo Department of Psychology and began work as a part-time writer in Hokkaido for the newspaper Yomiuri Shimbun. In 1958, he submitted an essay to a weekly Asahi Shimbun co-sponsored essay contest which won bronze, then he won the second, and the following year published a novel titled A Lead, officially entering the detective literary world. In 1959 he left the newspaper he was writing for. He named Paul Winterton as his favorite writer. He produced over a thousand short stories, many which were made into bunko, but the introduction of the consumption tax led to price revisions, and many publishers stopped printing them.

Shigero Kurosawa criticized his writing and described it as "novels that do not shed blood and sweat", that goes through mystery as an intellectual game but, on the other hand, the patterns of works repeatedly become mannerism, eliminating even eccentric and large-scale crime, creating realism and a characteristic moderation.[1]

He befriended other writers with who he maintained a proactive style of friendship (Satoshi Kuroiwa was a close friend), including Kyo Takigawa, Norio Kono, Shinichi Hoshi, Tsutomu Mizukami, Shoji Yuki who were young artists who formed a friendship circle called a "murder club", later including Sasazawa Hidariho, Oyabu Haruhiko, Michio Tsuzuki, Jiro Ikushima, Masako Togawa.

He won the Japan Mystery Literature Award in 1997 and the Kikuchi Kan Prize in 2009.

On April 27, 2013, Sano died of pneumonia in hospital at Kawasaki City. He was 84 years old.[2]

Works (titles may be approximate translations)

Short Works Compilations

Novels

Reviews and Other Works

TV

References

  1. Top phase Hazuki "Shinichi Hoshi <under> - one hundred people made an episode" Shincho paperback ISBN 978-4101482262 , 365P. I heard it Shinichi Hoshi answered, "I do not have my Nante such influence." In fact, paperback star had sold. The book 369p, 1988 the total circulation of Shincho paperback on February 15, has topped the 20 million unit, Seicho Matsumoto - Liao Shiba Taro there is a description to the effect that the total circulation second only to.
  2. Hiroshi Sano death mystery world leader Sankei Shimbun, April 28, 2013 View
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