Character experience, Toyoko Yamasaki.
She is one of the three talented women in Japanese contemporary literature, and one of the top ten female writers in postwar Japan, with the same fame as Seicho Matsumoto and Tsutomu Minakami. Saiya Skirt Feng Zikai was born in Osaka on 1924 1 1 March 3rd. After graduating from Kyoto Women's College (now Kyoto Women's University), she worked in the Fine Arts Department of the Daily News Agency and worked as a reporter under the famous writer Jing Shangjing. After work, he is engaged in writing. 1957, he first tried to cry with the book Warm Curtain. The following year, he won the 39th Mu Zhi Prize for his book The Warm Flower Curtain. After that, he resigned from the newspaper and concentrated on writing. After the 1960s, her writing style gradually turned to realistic criticism, and she published The Female Family in 1963. In the same year, the White Giant Tower began to be serialized in Sunday Daily, which attracted great attention from the society because of its sharp doctor-patient relationship. The Gorgeous Family published in 1973 is based on the financial reform in Japan, which describes the entanglement between human desire and money power in the banking sector. Later, she once again shocked the Japanese literary world with the trilogy War-Wasteland, Land of Two Mothers and Children of the Earth, among which the sales of Wasteland alone exceeded 6.5 million copies! 1999, she published The Sun Without the Sun, which revealed the secrets of the aviation industry and once again set an amazing sales record of nearly 6.5 million copies! Although she is over 80 years old, her critical pen has never stopped. In 2009, her latest novel, Destiny's Man, was released again, which showed the reporter's pursuit of truth and persistence in social justice under the background of the return of Okinawa and the secret agreement between Japan and the United States. It really triggered a heated discussion from all walks of life, not only sold over one million, but also ranked first in the best-selling list of the most authoritative Japanese magazine Da Vinci and Japanese sellers. She won the special prize of the 63rd "Daily Publishing Culture Award", and once again she showed her extraordinary observation and "foresight" ability. At the end of 2009, a former Japanese official testified in court and finally admitted that the Okinawa secret agreement did exist. Her works are closely structured, climax after climax, and the complex human nature intertwined with love and hate is even more fascinating, making them the best theme for film adaptation. Among them, The Gorgeous Family was adapted into a TV series as soon as it was published, and/kloc-0 was made into a film by the famous social realism director Satsuo Yamamoto in 974. In 2007, TBS was adapted into a TV series for the second time, starring idol superstar Kimura Takuya. In 2009, Sunset was also adapted and put on the screen, costing more than 2 billion yen. It was played by the best actor, Ken Watanabe, and won the "Japanese Academy Award" and "Knowing Painting Award". The Waste Land has also been adapted into a TV series. As a commemorative drama for the 50th anniversary of the opening of Fuji TV, it has become a topic, starring many powerful actors such as Toshiaki Karasawa. 199 1 year, Toyoko Yamasaki was awarded the "Kikuchi Kuan Award" for his outstanding contribution to Japanese literature. On September 29th, Toyoko Yamasaki, a famous Japanese woman writer, died at the age of 89. Toyoko Yamasaki has created many novels in his life, and most of his works, such as White Pagoda and Sunset, have also been adapted into film and television dramas, which have aroused widespread influence in Japanese society.
According to Japanese local media reports, Toyoko Yamasaki died of heart failure. Toyoko Yamasaki 1924 was born in Osaka, and 1944 graduated from the China Literature Department of Kyoto Women's College, and worked as a reporter for the Literature Department of Daily News. Warm Curtain was written in 1957, and Love in Flowers written in 1958 described the story of a female boss running a folk art field, and won the 39th Naoki Award. Most of Toyoko Yamasaki's early works describe the customs of Osaka, such as shipyards.