Mystery Writers of Japan

Mystery Writers of Japan

Mystery Writers of Japan (日本推理作家協会 Nihon Suiri Sakka Kyōkai?) is an organization for mystery writers in Japan.

The organization was founded on 21 June 1947 by EDOGAWA Rampo. It is currently chaired by Keigo HIGASHINO and claims about 600 members.

It presents the Mystery Writers of Japan Award to writers every year. It also presents the Edogawa Rampo Award to amateur writers who has had few or no novels published commercially.

Contents

History

On 21 June 1947 , Edogawa Rampo founded the Detective Fiction Writers Club (探偵作家クラブ Tantei Sakka Kurabu?), which was based in Tokyo. In 1954, the Club merged with the Detective Fiction Writers Club of Kansai (関西探偵作家クラブ Kansai Tantei Sakka Kurabu?), the counterpart based in Kansai region, and changed its name to the Detective Fiction Writers Club of Japan (日本探偵作家クラブ Nihon Tantei Sakka Kurabu?). On 31 January 1963, the club changed its name to Mystery Writers of Japan (日本推理作家協会 Nihon Suiri Sakka Kyōkai?).

Awards

The MWJ presents two annual awards.

  • Mystery Writers of Japan Award (since 1948)
    • Best Novel
    • Best Short Story
    • Best Critical/Biographical Work
  • Edogawa Rampo Award (since 1955): sponsored by Kodansha and Fuji Television, open to anyone who has had few or no novels published commercially. The winner receives a small bust of Edogawa Rampo and a prize of 10,000,000 yen. The novel of the winner is published by Kodansha. The members of the selection committee of 2012 are Natsuo Kirino, Natsuhiko Kyogoku, Ira Ishida, Bin Konno (ja) and Keigo Higashino.

Presidents

Anthologies

The MWJ started compiling the annual anthology of members in 1948.

References

  • Shimpo, Hirohisa (2000), "Nihon Suiri Sakka Kyōkai". Nihon Misuteri Jiten(日本ミステリー事典), Shinchosha, Tokyo

See also

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Mystery Writers of Japan Award — The Mystery Writers of Japan Awards (日本推理作家協会賞, Nihon Suiri Sakka Kyōkai Shō?) are presented every year by the Mystery Writers of Japan. They honor the best in crime fiction and critical/biographical work published in the previous year. Contents …   Wikipedia

  • Mystery Writers of America — Edgar Allan Poe, MWA logo Mystery Writers of America is an organization for mystery writers, based in New York. The organization was founded in 1945 by Clayton Rawson, Anthony Boucher, Lawrence Treat, and Brett Halliday. It presents the Edgar… …   Wikipedia

  • Crime Writers' Association — The Crime Writers Association is a writers association in the United Kingdom. Founded by John Creasey in 1953, it is currently chaired by Peter James and claims 450+ members. Membership is open to any author who has had one crime novel produced… …   Wikipedia

  • Mystery House — This article is about the Apple II computer game. For other uses, see Mystery House (disambiguation). Mystery House Cover art Developer(s) On Line Systems Publ …   Wikipedia

  • A Nero Wolfe Mystery — Title illustration and design by Aurore Giscard d Estaing Also known as Nero Wolfe The Nero Wolfe Mysteries Genre …   Wikipedia

  • Locked room mystery — The locked room mystery is a sub genre of detective fiction wherein a crime such as murder is committed under apparently impossible circumstances typically involving a crime scene that no intruder could have entered or exited (thus locked room ) …   Wikipedia

  • List of Mystery Science Theater 3000 episodes — This page is a list of episodes for the American TV series Mystery Science Theater 3000. In total, 198 episodes were broadcast from 1988 to 1999. Contents 1 Season index 2 Explanation of entries 3 KTMA TV …   Wikipedia

  • Magical Mystery Tour — This article is about the Beatles EP and LP. For other uses, see Magical Mystery Tour (disambiguation). Magical Mystery Tour EP (Double EP) by …   Wikipedia

  • Batman: Mystery of the Batwoman — DVD cover art Directed by Curt Geda Sequence directors: Jennifer Graves Tim Maltby …   Wikipedia

  • Cinema of Japan — List of Japanese films 1898–1919 1920s 1930s 1940s 1950s …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”