Eiki Matayoshi

Eiki Matayoshi
Native name 又吉 栄喜
Born (1947-07-10) July 10, 1947
Urasoe, Okinawa, United States Ryukyu Island
Occupation Writer

Eiki Matayoshi (又吉 栄喜, Matayoshi Eiki, born 15 July 1947) is a contemporary Japanese writer. His novels are always set in the Okinawa archipelago, and he is considered one of the most important contemporary novelists from Okinawa.

One of his earliest novels, Jōji ga shasatsu shita inoshishi (ジョージが射殺した猪 - "The Wild Boar that George Shot"), published in 1978, became very famous for being inspired by a true, controversial story. A soldier of the US occupation forces in Okinawa shot a local man, and during the trial he declared that he mistakenly took him for a wild boar. The US soldier was declared innocent, arousing a big debate among the locals.

Matayoshi became known outside Okinawa thanks to the prestigious Akutagawa Prize, which he won in 1995 for his novel Buta no mukui (豚の報い The Pig's Retribution).[1]

Selected Works

Movie Adaptations

References

  1. "Okinawa Writers Excel in Literature" The Okinawa Times 2000/7/21 (Retrieved on January 13, 2008)


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