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Author Biography
Birth—February 19, 1952
Reared—Sasebo, Nagasaki, Japan
Education—Musashino Art University
Awards—Noma Liberal Arts New Member Prize;
  Hirabayashitai Children’s Literary Prize; Yomiuri
  Literature Prize 
Currently—lives in Japan


Ryunosuke Murakami is a Japanese novelist and filmmaker. He is colloquially referred to as the "Maradona of Japanese literature. (His name Ryunosuke was taken from the main character in Daibosatsutoge a fiction by Nakazato Kaizan, 1885–1944).

Murakami attended primary, middle and senior high school in Sasebo. While a student in senior high, Murakami helped form a rock band, in which he was the drummer. After the band’s breakup, he went on to join the rugby club, which he found especially grueling. He soon left the rugby club and transferred to the school’s newspaper department. In the summer of his third year in senior high, Murakami and his colleagues barricaded the rooftop of his high school and he was placed under house arrest for three months. During this time, he had an encounter with the hippie culture which influenced him greatly.

Murakami graduated from high school in 1970, around which time he went on to form yet another rock band and produce 8-millimeter indie films.

Murakami went to Tokyo and enrolled in the silkscreen department in Gendaishichosha school of art, but dropped out halfway through the year. In October 1972, he moved to Fussa near the base of the U.S. army and was accepted into the Musashino Art University in the sculpture program.

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Murakami's first work, the short novel Almost Transparent Blue, written while he was still a student of Musashino Art University, deals with promiscuity and drug use among disaffected Japanese youth. Critically acclaimed as a new style of literature, it won the newcomer's literature prize in 1976 despite some observers decrying it as decadent. Later the same year, Blue won the Akutagawa Prize, going on to become a best seller. In 1980, Murakami published the much longer novel Coin Locker Babies, again to critical acclaim.

In 1980, Murakami received the 3rd Noma Liberal Arts New Member prize for his novel Coin Locker Babies. Afterward he wrote an autobiographical work, 69. His next work, Ai to Genzou no Fascism (1987), revolves around the struggle reforming Japan’s Survival of the Fittest model of society, by a secret society, the "Hunting Society". His work in 1988, Topaz, is about a SM Girl’s radical expression of her sex

Murakami’s story The World in Five Minutes From Now (1994) is written as a point of view in a parallel universe version of Japan, which got him nominated for the 30th Tanizaki Junichiro prize. In 1996 he continued his autobiography 69, and released the Murakami Ryu Movie and Novel Collection. He also won the Hirabayashitai Children’s literary prize. The same year, he wrote the novel Topaz II about a female high school student engaged in compensated dating activities, which later was adapted as a live action film Love and Pop by Anime director Hideaki Anno.

In 1998 he wrote the Psycho-horror styled story In the Miso Soup which won him the Yomiuri Literature Prize. In 1999 he became in the Editor in Chief of mail magazine JMM which discusses the "bubble" economy of Japan. (From Wikipedia.)