Yōjirō Ishizaka (石坂 洋次郎, Ishizaka Yōjirō, January 25, 1900 – October 7, 1986) was an influential and popular novelist of post-World War II Japan.
Education, early career, and family
Born at Daikancho 82, Hirosaki, Aomori Prefecture, Ishizaka went to Hirosaki Middle School in 1913 and then to Keio University in 1920. Upon graduating, he took a position at Hirosaki Women's High School. Later, he became a teacher at Akita Women's High School. From 1929 to 1938 he taught at Yokote Junior High School.
In 1939, he moved to Tokyo, and in 1940, during World War II, he was a news correspondent in the Philippines.
One of his granddaughters was Tomi Pierce (1953-2010),[1] a writer and later producer of video games including Prince of Persia and The Last Express (admired for its story-telling), with Jordan Mechner;[2] she also worked with her husband Doug Carlston, founder of Brøderbund. Another granddaughter, Tomi's sister Naomi Pierce, is an authority on butterflies and a professor at Harvard University.
Writing career
His novel Blue Mountain Range (青い山脈 Aoi sanmyaku) helped introduce the concept of the "New Japan" - a postwar culture that could look forward to a new future.
While widely popular in Japan, to the point that some of his stories were made into multiple movies, only a small portion of his writings have been translated and published in English.
Writings
"Go to See a Sea" published in Mita Bungaku magazine (1927)
Wakai Hito published in Mita Bungaku magazine (1933)
Wakai hito (1937) (novel)
Doku-ganryu masamune (1942) (novel)
Blue Mountain Range (青い山脈 Aoi sanmyaku) (1947) (novel)
film adaptation: 青い山脈 Aoi sanmyaku (1949 film) (1949)
film adaptation: 續 青い山脈 Zoku aoi sanmyaku (1949)
film adaptation: 青い山脈 新子の巻 Aoi sanmyaku Shinko no maki (1957)
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