Jump to content

Hase Seishū

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hase Seishū (馳 星周, born February 18, 1965) is the pen name of Toshihito Bandō (坂東 齢人), a well-known Japanese novelist. He is known for writing Yakuza crime novels. His pen name is based on the Chinese name of Hong Kong filmmaker Stephen Chow, Chow Sing-chi (周星馳), written backwards and rendered in Japanese.[1]

He was born in Hokkaido, Japan and graduated from Yokohama City University with his B.A. in 1987.[2]

A few of his novels were adapted into Asian films, such as The City of Lost Souls and Sleepless Town, in 2000 and 1998, respectively.

Hase supervised the story for Sega's 2005 video game Yakuza and its 2006 sequel Yakuza 2. He had no involvement with later entries in the series.

In 2020, Hase won the Naoki Prize with his novel Shonen to Inu (A Boy and Dog).[3]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Booksfromjapan.jp".
  2. ^ 卒業生インタビュー12 馳星周氏(in Japanese)
  3. ^ "Novelists Takayama and Tono win Akutagawa awards; Hase wins Naoki Prize". The Japan Times. 16 July 2020. Retrieved 6 October 2020.
[edit]