Ken'ichi Sakemi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ken'ichi Sakemi
Native name
酒見さかみ 賢一けんいち
Born(1963-11-26)November 26, 1963
Kurume, Fukuoka Prefecture, Japan
DiedNovember 7, 2023(2023-11-07) (aged 59)
Alma materAichi University, Faculty of Letters, Department of Philosophy, Major in Eastern philosophy
GenreHistorical fiction, Fantasy, Science fiction
Notable works

Ken'ichi Sakemi (酒見さかみ 賢一けんいち, Sakemi Ken'ichi, November 26, 1963 – November 7, 2023) was a Japanese writer.[1]

Sakemi is known for his novels with Chinese themes.[2] And his work is renowned for his unbridled imagination, based on Chinese history but not restricted by it. His works have attracted a lot of attention from other fields and have been adapted into other formats, including manga, anime, and films.[3]

Life and career[edit]

Ken'ichi Sakemi was born in Kurume, Fukuoka Prefecture. In 1988 he graduated from Aichi University, Faculty of Letters, Department of Philosophy with a major in Eastern philosophy.[1][3]

In 1989, he won the 1st Japan Fantasy Novel Award for Kōkyū Shōsetsu, and published it as his first novel by Shinchosha.[1][3] The novel was also nominated for the 102nd Naoki Prize.[2] The following year, this novel made into the anime television film Like the Clouds, Like the Wind.[4]

In 1992, he won the Atsushi Nakajima Memorial Prize for Bokkō and Rōkō ni ari. Bokkō was nominated again for the Naoki Award, and was subsequently adapted into a manga and a live-action film.[1][3] As for Bokkō, Studio Ghibli once considered making an anime film directed by Mamoru Oshii around 1991, and even created imageboards by Katsuya Kondō, but the plan fell through.[5][6] With Kondo, he has also worked on an unfinished manga called D'arc: Jan-nu Daruku Den.[7]

In 2000, he won the Jiro Nitta Literary Award for Shūkōtan.[1]

Sakemi died on November 7, 2023, at the age of 59 due to respiratory failure.[1][8]

Style[edit]

Sakemi's first novel was a fantasy set in a fictional dynasty similar to China's, but since then he has increasingly used real Chinese history as her subject matter.[7] Nevertheless, he is renowned for his unrestrained imagination, while keeping historical facts in mind.[3] Beyond China relations, he has also published works such as the military science fiction Seibo no butai and the Victorian-set Katarite no Jijō.[7]

At the time of the 1989 publication of Kōkyū Shōetsu, few other such works were set in a fictional empire in the Chinese style, with the emperor, the inner palace (residences of the consorts), officials and eunuchs as the prescribed setting. This led to the creation of many later works that were similarly set in a world with Chinese culture and customs, but with a free-flowing storyline that could be about anything and everything, without regard to historical fact.[2][7] And the fact that that novel won the first Grand Prize also determined the unique character of the Japan Fantasy Novel Award, which has some fantasy, some horror, some speculative novel and some experimental fiction.[2] He influenced later writers such as Riku Onda.[9][10][11] His death brought him renewed attention as a writer who pioneered the subsequent Japanese fiction scene, which flourished with Chinese dynastic-style fantasy and mystery.[2]

Awards and nominations[edit]

  • 1989 – Winner of the 1st Japan Fantasy Novel Award: Kōkyū Shōsetsu
  • 1990 – Nominated for the 102nd Naoki Prize: Kōkyū Shōsetsu
  • 1991 – Nominated for the 104th Naoki Prize: Bokkō
  • 1992 – Winner of the Atsushi Nakajima Memorial Award 50 years after his death: Bokkō, Rōkō ni Ari, Pythagoras no Tabi
  • 2000 – Winner of the 19th Jirō Nitta Literary Award: Shūkōtan

Bibliography[edit]

Novels[edit]

Short story collections[edit]

  • Seibo no Butai (Troops of the Holy Mother) (聖母せいぼ部隊ぶたい), 1991
  • Pythagoras no Tabi (Pythagoras' Journey) (ピュタゴラスのたび), 1991
  • Bunkai (Disassembly) (分解ぶんかい), 2010

Essays[edit]

  • Chugoku Zatsuwa Chugoku-teki Shisou (Chinese Folklore, Chinese thought) (中国ちゅうごく雑話ざつわ 中国ちゅうごくてき思想しそう), 2007

Adaptations[edit]

Films[edit]

  • A Battle of Wits, 2006
    A Japanese-Chinese-Korean co-production based on Hideki Mori's manga version, the film was released in Asia in 2006 and in Japan on February 3, 2007.[12]

Anime[edit]

Manga[edit]

  • Bokkō (Mohism Attacks) (ぼくおさむ), (Original story by Ken'ichi Sakemi, Illustration by Hideki Mori, scenario cooperation by Sentarō Kubota), complete in 11 volumes
    A manga based on Bokkō. It was serialized in Big Comic from 1992 to 1996. It became an original storyline along the way, expanding on ideas from the novel.
  • D'arc Jan-nu Daruku Den (D'arc: Biography of Jeanne d'Arc) (D'arc ジャンヌ・ダルクでん), (Story by Ken'ichi Sakemi, Art by Katsuya Kondō), up to 2 volumes
    Original manga work without a novel as a basis. It was serialized in Animage from the August 1994 issue to the August 1995 issue, and then stopped. Unfinished.
  • Rōkō ni Ari-Gankai Denki (In the Alley-The Legend of Yan Hui) (陋巷にり-かおかい伝奇でんき), (Original story: Ken'ichi Sakemi, Manga: Jun Hanyunyū), complete in 3 volumes
    A manga based on Rōkō ni Ari. It was serialized in the monthly web comic magazine "Digicomi Shincho com2" from 2007.
  • Nakimushi Yowamushi Shokatsu Kōmei (Crybaby and cowardly, Zhuge Liang) (むし弱虫よわむししょかずら孔明こうめい), (Original story: Ken'ichi Sakemi, Manga: Tabasa Iori), complete in 3 volumes
    A manga based on Nakimushi Yowamushi Shokatsu Kōmei. It was serialized in Monthly Big Comic Spirits from the December 2017 issue to the July 2019 issue.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f "作家さっか酒見さかみ賢一けんいちさん死去しきょ後宮こうきゅう小説しょうせつ」でデビュー、中国ちゅうごく題材だいざい執筆しっぴつ" [Writer Kenichi Sakemi dies; debuts with 'Kōkyū Shōsetsu' and writes about Chinese history]. The Asahi Shimbun (in Japanese). Tokyo. November 15, 2023. Retrieved November 29, 2023.
  2. ^ a b c d e Taniguchi, Riuichi (November 16, 2023). "【追悼ついとう】『じゅうこく』や『薬屋くすりやのひとりごと』の先駆さきが酒見さかみ賢一けんいち後宮こうきゅう小説しょうせつ』がひらいた中華ちゅうかふうエンタメ小説しょうせつ世界せかい (1)". Real Sound (in Japanese). blueprint. Retrieved November 29, 2023.
  3. ^ a b c d e "酒見さかみ賢一けんいち後宮こうきゅう小説しょうせつ』 - 新潮社しんちょうしゃ" (in Japanese). Shinchosha. Retrieved November 29, 2023.
  4. ^ Sevakis, Justin (February 8, 2007). "Buried Treasure: Like the Clouds, Like the Wind". Anime News Network. Retrieved October 1, 2022.
  5. ^ Oshii, Mamoru (2017). だれかたらなかったジブリをかたろう [Let's talk about Ghibli that no one talked about.] (in Japanese). Tokyo: Tokuma Shoten. p. 411. ISBN 978-4198645021.
  6. ^ "VR展覧てんらんかい 近藤こんどう勝也かつやe-museum". にいはま紀行きこう (in Japanese). Niihama, Ehime Prefecture. Retrieved October 1, 2022.
  7. ^ a b c d Taniguchi, Riuichi (November 16, 2023). "【追悼ついとう】『じゅうこく』や『薬屋くすりやのひとりごと』の先駆さきが酒見さかみ賢一けんいち後宮こうきゅう小説しょうせつ』がひらいた中華ちゅうかふうエンタメ小説しょうせつ世界せかい (2)". Real Sound (in Japanese). blueprint. Retrieved November 29, 2023.
  8. ^ Pineda, Rafael Antonio (November 16, 2023). "'Like the Clouds, Like the Wind' Novelist Kenichi Sakemi Passes Away". Anime News Network. Retrieved November 29, 2023.
  9. ^ "恩田おんだりく先生せんせい絶賛ぜっさんの「たん蒐集しゅうしゅうろく」シリーズで注目ちゅうもくあつめる著者ちょしゃ角川かどかわ文庫ぶんこはつ登場とうじょう!『くすりくえ清水しみず さくさんインタビュー". kadobun (in Japanese). KADOKAWA. July 28, 2022. Retrieved November 29, 2023.
  10. ^ "こくなおすために尽力じんりょくする男女だんじょ姿すがたえがく、中国ちゅうごく歴史れきしエンタメ長編ちょうへん『戴天』". An An (in Japanese). Magazine House. March 27, 2020. Retrieved November 29, 2023.
  11. ^ "特別とくべつ連載れんさいインタビュー特別とくべつ連載れんさいインタビュー だい1かい 恩田おんだりく" (in Japanese). Gentosha. March 27, 2020. Retrieved November 29, 2023.
  12. ^ "『ぼくおさむ』アンディ・ラウ 単独たんどくインタビュー". シネマトゥデイ (in Japanese). 株式会社かぶしきがいしゃシネマトゥデイ. January 18, 2007. Retrieved October 1, 2022.
  13. ^ "くものようにふうのように" (in Japanese). Studio Pierrot Official Site. Retrieved October 1, 2022.

External links[edit]