Chōhei Kambayashi
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Chōhei Kambayashi (神林長平, Kambayashi Chōhei) (born 1953) is a Japanese science fiction writer.
Born in Niigata, Kambayashi graduated Nagaoka National College of Technology. He debuted in 1979 with the short story "Dance with a Fox", which was an honorable mention of the 5th Hayakawa SF Contest. He quickly became fan favorite, and during 1980s and 1990s, he won the Seiun Award seven times (five for novels, twice for short stories). In a 2006 SF Magazine poll he was ranked third best Japanese SF writer of all time. He was the chair of honor of the 24th Nihon SF Taikai, Japan's national SF convention, in 1985.
Kambayashi received Nihon SF Taishō Award in 1995 for Kototsubo. He was the chairman of Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of Japan in 2001-2003.
His writing often blurs the reality and alternate reality. Early works, such as May Peace Be On Your Soul, were often compared to Philip K. Dick, as Kambayashi himself acknowledges that the Dick's works lead him to science fiction writing.
Probably his most popular work is Yukikaze. It was made into an animated video series in 2002-2005.
Another popular work, Enemy Is Pirate, which consists of eight books (as of 2009), is a more lighter tone space opera series. There was an animated video series released in 1989.
[b]Bibliography[/b]
Titles with asterisk * are short story collection. Titles with dagger † are series story collection.
* Kitsune to odore (狐と踊れ?, Dance with a Fox) (1981, ISBN 4-15-030142-5); New edition (2010, ISBN 978-4-15-030995-4) dropped "Teki wa kaizoku" and added "Rakusa", "Tsuta momiji", "Bakurei", "Kisei". *
* Anata no tamashii ni yasuragiare (あなたの魂に安らぎあれ?) (1983)
* Shichidō otoshi (七胴落とし?) (1983)
* Teki wa kaizoku, kaizokuban (敵は海賊・海賊版?, Enemy Pirates, Pirate Edition) (1983)
* Kotobatsukaishi (言葉使い師?) (1983) *
* Sentō yōsei yukikaze (戦闘妖精・雪風?) (1984); Revised version: Sentō yōsei yukikaze