Natsuo Kirino

Natsuo Kirino
Natsuo Kirinois the pen name of Mariko Hashioka, a Japanese novelist and a leading figure in the recent boom of female writers of Japanese detective fiction...
NationalityJapanese
ProfessionNovelist
Date of Birth7 October 1951
CountryJapan
order what-if accepting
And what if, in order to keep on living, I have to continue to accept myself?
reality order people
In reality of everyday occurrences I've had to submit to people in order not to lose them. It's less the submission that bothers me, I guess, than how it makes my life miserable. And what happens if I can't forgive myself for making that choice? And what if, in order to keep on living, I have to continue to accept myself? What am I supposed to do? Conclusion: It'd be best if I'm destroyed. The best thing is for me just to vanish.
men thinking order
In order to induce the process of decay, water is necessary. I think that, in the case of women, men are the water.
crack explore role
A crime is like a crack in reality, and it is the author's role to explore those cracks. As a writer, I like to see how they impinge on people.
became book choice hit japan novel obvious sold sort translated
'Out' was my real breakthrough, the novel that became a hit in Japan and sold a lot of books, so it was sort of an obvious choice for being the first book to be translated into English.
age appeal books convey foreigners novels particular rather universal
I don't know if foreigners will take to my novels or not. It may be that my books appeal only to a particular gender or age group rather than convey a more universal appeal.
age becoming good rather writer
I first thought about becoming a writer after the age of 30, which is rather late, I'd say. In my 20s, I wasn't especially good at anything, and I didn't have a lot of experiences. I was just a young woman without a good job.
cans involve location notice people places thrown
For research, I like to go to the location of the places in the novels. The first thing that I do is involve my senses: I notice the smells; I open the trash cans and look at what people have thrown away.
novels
I started writing juvenile novels around 1985. I never really thought of it as a career, but more as a way to make a living.
earned falling literary mostly mysteries prize
One of my books, 'Rain Falling on My Face,' earned me the 39th Edogawa Ranpo prize. It's a very prestigious literary prize in Japan, mostly for mysteries and thrillers.
confusing experience inevitably living marry remains rung wife
It's a very confusing experience living as a woman in Japan. If your husband is white-collar, the wife is blue. Even if you marry a person of status, the wife inevitably remains a rung below.
The thing I don't like about detective stories is looking for criminals.
anonymous power socially
In Japan, full-time homemakers have no economic power of their own, and they socially lead a faceless, anonymous existence.
I'm happy to be told that I am beautiful, but I don't gain anything from that.