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Masamoto Nasu
Japanese children's writer (1942–2021) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Masamoto Nasu (Japanese: 那須正幹, romanized: Nasu Masamoto; 6 June 1942 – 22 July 2021) was a Japanese children's writer.
Biography
Nasu was born in Hiroshima. When he was three years old, he survived the atomic bombing of the city by the United States on 6 August 1945; the hypocenter was three kilometers from his home.[1]
He studied forest entomology at the Shimane Agricultural University and worked as an office worker in Tokyo before returning to Hiroshima.[2] His writing debut was in 1972, with Kubinashi jizo no takara (The treasure of the headless jizo).[3]
In 1978 he started to write the series of books Zukkoke sannin-gumi (The funny trio), featuring the adventures of three elementary school children: Hachibei, Hakase and Moo-chan. The series, published until 2004, became a hit, spanning fifty books which sold more than 25 million copies in Japan; it was made into a feature film, an anime and a television series.[4]
Nasu wrote often about the aftermath of the atomic bombings, opposing war and advocating peace. Two of his books were translated to English: the 1984 memoir Children of the Paper Crane: The Story of Sadako Sasaki and Her Struggle with the A-Bomb Disease and the 1995 picture book Hiroshima: A tragedy never to be repeated.[5]
Nasu died on 22 July 2021, in Hofu, Yamaguchi Prefecture.[4]
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References
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