The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Little surprise as women win Akutagawa, Naoki prizes

- The Yomiuri Shimbun

This year’s rst winners of the Akutagawa and Naoki literature prizes, which are given out twice annually, were announced July 20 in Tokyo. Two women won the awards, which was highly expected as the ve authors short-listed for the Akutagawa Prize for literary ction were all women, and four women were among the ve nalists for the Naoki Prize for a work of popular ction.

e Society for the Promotion of Japanese Literature held the selection committee meeting at a ryotei restaurant in the Tsukiji district of Tokyo, and perhaps ttingly, Junko Takase, 34, won the Akutagawa Prize for “Oishii gohan ga taberarema­su yoni” (May we have a delicious meal). e story was rst published in the January issue of the Gunzo literature magazine.

e Naoki Prize went to Misumi Kubo, 56, for “Yoru ni hoshi o hanatsu” (Releasing stars at night), which was published by Bungeishun­ju Ltd.

Each winner receives prize money of ¥1 million. An award ceremony will be held in Tokyo in late August.

is was the second time for Ehime Prefecture native Takase to be short-listed for the Akutagawa Prize. While working a day job, she wrote, winning the Subaru literature prize for her debut work “Inu no katachi o shiteiru mono” (Something with the shape of a dog) in 2019.

Her Akutagawa Prize-winning work tells the story of three young people working at a branch o ce of a company. e novella skillfully uses the characters’ subtle gestures and food-related episodes to describe their irritation with each other and the values gaps among them, which become exposed through their work.

“It multifacet­edly and thoroughly depicts human relations in a small

group of people, such as workplace or a relationsh­ip,” said novelist Hiromi Kawakami, one of the Akutagawa Prize selectors who won the award in 1996. As for the fact that all the shortliste­d works were written by women, she said, “I think that the times are changing and the selection process is very open.”

For Tokyo-born Kubo, her third time on the short list for the Naoki Prize turned out to be lucky. A er working as a freelance editor and writer, she won

the grand prize of the Onna ni yoru Onna no tameno R-18 literature prize in 2009 for “Mikumari.” Her story collection “Fugainai boku wa sora o mita” (I, a timid person, have looked at the sky), which includes “Mikumari,” won the Yamamoto Shugoro literature prize in 2011.

Her Naoki Prize-winning work is a collection of short stories about people who have been separated from someone special. She uses masterly storytelli­ng

techniques and an exquisite writing style to understand and present subtleties of the human psyche.

“ese are all pure and beautiful short stories and she has not run away from the pandemic either,” said novelist Mariko Hayashi, a member of the Naoki Prize selection committee who is also the new chairperso­n of Nihon University. “Contempora­ry subjects are subtly and smoothly laid out. I am awed by her quality as a writer.” (July 22)

 ?? The Yomiuri Shimbun ?? Naoki Prize-winner Misumi Kubo, left, and Akutagawa Prize-winner Junko Takase hold up their winning works in Tokyo on July 20.
The Yomiuri Shimbun Naoki Prize-winner Misumi Kubo, left, and Akutagawa Prize-winner Junko Takase hold up their winning works in Tokyo on July 20.

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