Article
Today with her numerous novellas, short stories, essays, and novels, she is considered one of Japan’s most important contemporary authors. In Europe, Yôko Ogawa was first only read in France, where since 1995 ten of her books have appeared in translation.
Yôko Ogawa surprises her readers with a cool, minimal narrative style, which offers them all the more room to use their imaginations and make associations. Her simple sentences, the detailed descriptions, and the linear narrative style intensify into an unusual, diffuse atmosphere. The characters in Ogawa’s unsettling, mysterious worlds are reduced to just a few characteristics. The author primarily narrates from the viewpoint of a young, rather passive woman, who freely subordinates her actions and existence to the dominance of a man. This is also the case in ´Hotel Iris,´ where it is simply the dominating voice of a significantly older man that fascinates the 17-year-old Mari to such a degree that she enters into a sadomasochistic relationship with him. Ogawa’s approach is neither voyeuristic nor does she pass moral judgment - she instead focuses on a subtle account of mutual dependency.
Yôko Ogawa lives with her family in the Japanese prefect of Hyôgo.
Merits
1990 Akutagawa Prize for "Pregnancy Calendar" (Ninshin karendaa)
2004 Yomiuri Prize for "The Professor´s Beloved Equation" (Hakase no aishita sushiki, translated as The Gift of Numbers)
2004 Izumi Prize for "Burafuman no maisō"
2006 Tanizaki Prize for "Meena´s March" (Mīna no kōshin)
2008 Shirley Jackson Award for "The Diving Pool"



