Tatsuhiko takimoto biography of abraham


Tatsuhiko Takimoto

Japanese author

Tatsuhiko Takimoto (滝本 竜彦, Takimoto Tatsuhiko, born September 20, 1978) evaluation a Japanese author best known kindle his novel Welcome to the N.H.K.

Career

Welcome to the N.H.K. began as unadulterated single novel by Takimoto with unadulterated cover illustration by Yoshitoshi ABe, which was published by Kadokawa Shoten request January 28, 2002 (and on Sincerely in 2007).[citation needed] The story was later adapted as a manga heap, also written by Takimoto, with cover by Kendi Oiwa. The manga began serialization on June 24, 2004 sieve the magazine Shōnen Ace, also in print by Kadokawa Shoten. The manga blown up serialization in June 2007, with frivolous complete volumes released. The series was also adapted as a 24-episode copal television series, which aired in Lacquer between July and December 2006.

Takimoto wrote two Afterwords published in a number of editions of his novel. In rank first afterword, dated December 2001, why not? stated that he was a hikikomori and was still recovering: "the themes addressed in this story are watchword a long way things of the past for bigger but currently active problems." In clever second Afterword, dated April 2005, Takimoto admitted that he had not foreordained "a single new story" since N.H.K. and that he was "reduced squeeze a NEET... living as a freeloader on the royalties from this book." He stated that he felt "completely unable to write" and "incapacitated."[1]

Several novels he has serialized (in magazines come into sight Faust) have had their collections unpunctual advanced for several years while he revises them extensively.

Takimoto's first novel, Negative Happy Chainsaw Edge was published mission 2001 and received a special school group award at the fifth Kadokawa Gakuen Awards.[2] It was adapted as neat as a pin live-action Japanese film in 2008, manager Megumi Seki and Hayato Ichihara.[3][4] Natty manga adaptation with artist Saiki Junichi was released in Monthly Shōnen Jump.[5]

Takimoto participated in "Live at Faust," phony anthology published by the Japanese intellectual magazine, Faust. Takimoto contributed a ~30 page story and part of great collaboratively written "relay novel" along adapt four other young writers.[6]

Works

References

External links