Kanae Minato
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Kanae Minato | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1973 (age 52–53) Innoshima, Hiroshima, Japan |
| Occupation | Writer |
| Language | Japanese |
| Period | 2007–present |
| Genre | Crime fiction, thriller |
| Notable awards | Japanese Booksellers Award (2009) Mystery Writers of Japan Award (2012) |
Kanae Minato (湊かなえ, Minato Kanae; born 1973) is a Japanese writer of crime fiction and thrillers. She is a member of the Mystery Writers of Japan and the Honkaku Mystery Writers Club of Japan.[1][2] She is a 2015 recipient of the Alex Awards.
She started writing in her thirties. Her first novel Confessions became a bestseller and won the Japanese Booksellers Award.
In youth she was an avid fan of mystery novels of Edogawa Ranpo, Maurice Leblanc, Agatha Christie, Keigo Higashino, Miyuki Miyabe and Yukito Ayatsuji.[3]
She has been described in Japan as "the queen of iyamisu."[4] Iyamisu (eww mystery) is a subgenre of mystery fiction which deals with grisly episodes and the dark side of human nature. The term was created in 2006 by the mystery critic Aoi Shimotsuki.[5] There has been an iyamisu boom in Japan since around 2012. Kanae Minato, Mahokaru Numata and Yukiko Mari are regarded as representatives of the genre in Japan.[6][7] The back cover blurb of the Japanese edition of Gone Girl, published in June 2013, was "One of the best iyamisu novels from overseas."
The English edition of Minato's Confessions, published in August 2014, was described by a critic as "the Gone Girl of Japan."[8]
Wall Street Journal selected Confessions as one of the 10 best mysteries of 2014.[9]
Works in English translation
- Confessions (original title: Kokuhaku), trans. Stephen Snyder (Mulholland Books, 2014) ISBN 9780316200929, OCLC 883146317
- Penance (original title: Shokuzai), trans. Philip Gabriel (Mulholland Books, 2017) ISBN 9780316349154, OCLC 956626339
Awards and nominations
- Japanese Awards
- 2007 – Shosetsu Suiri New Writers Prize: "The Priest"[10]
- 2009 – Japanese Booksellers Award: Confessions[11]
- 2012 – Mystery Writers of Japan Award for Best Short Story: "Umi no Hoshi"[12]
- U.S. Awards
- 2015 – Alex Award:[13] Confessions
- 2015 – Nominee for Strand Critics Award for Best First Novel:[14] Confessions
- 2015 – Nominee for Shirley Jackson Award for Best Novel:[15] Confessions
Bibliography
Standalone novels
- Kokuhaku (告白), 2008 (Confessions)
- Shōjo (少女), 2009 (Girls)
- Shokuzai (贖罪), 2009 (Expiation)
- Enu no Tame ni (Nのために), 2010 (For N)
- Yakō Kanransha (夜行観覧車), 2010 (The Night Ferris Wheel)
- Hana no Kusari (花の鎖), 2011 (The Chain of Flowers)
- Kyōgū (境遇), 2011 (Circumstances)
- Shirayukihime Satsujin Jiken (白ゆき姫殺人事件), 2012 (The Snow White Murder Case)
- Bosei (母性), 2012 (Motherhood)
- Kōkō Nyūshi (高校入試), 2013 (An Entrance Examination for a High School)
- Mame no Ue de Nemuru (豆の上で眠る), 2014 (Sleep on a Bean)
- Yama Onna Nikki (山女日記), 2014 (Mountain Woman Diary)
- Monogatari no Owari (物語のおわり), 2014 (The End of the Story)
- Zesshō (絶唱), 2015
- Reverse (リバース), 2015 (Reverse)
- Utopia (ユートピア), 2015
- Mirai (未来), 2018 (Future)
- Broadcast (ブロードキャスト), 2018
- Rakujitsu (落日), 2019 (Sunset)
- Kakera (カケラ), 2020 (Fragment)
- Ningen Hyōhon (人間標本), 2023[16]
- Akeboshi (暁星), 2025 (The Star at Dawn)[17]
Short story collections
- Ōfuku Shokan (往復書簡), 2010 (Correspondence)
- Safaia (サファイア), 2012 (Sapphire)
- Bōkyō (望郷), 2013 (Thoughts of Home)
- Poison Daughter Holy Mother (ポイズンドーター・ホーリーマザー), 2016