- Muramatsu Tomomi
nihongo|Tomomi Muramatsu|村松友視|Tomomi Muramatsu|extra=
10 April 1940 – is a novelist in lateShowa period andHeisei period Japan .Biography
Muramatsu was born in
Tokyo , but was raised inShimuzu, Shizuoka . His grandfather was the noted writerMuramatsu Shofu , and both his father and his mother worked for theliterary magazine "Chuo Koron ." Muramatsu Tomomi attendedKeio University 's Literature Department, and on graduation went to work for "Chuo Koron" himself as an editor. On the early death of his father, he was adopted by his grandfather, Muramatsu Shofu, as his legal heir.His first published work, a collection of essays, "Watashi puroresu no kyomi desu" ("I am a Professional Wrestling Fan"), published in 1980, was a best seller and established him as a mainstream writer. As the name implied, Muramatsu is a great fan of
professional wrestling , and has written a number of novels with wrestling as a theme. His "Semi-finaru" ("Semi-Final") was nominated for the prestigiousNaoki Prize .In 1982, his novel "Jidaiya no nyobo" ("The Wife of Jidaiya") was awarded the Naoki Prize, and was later made into a
movie .In 1997, his novel "Kamakura no Obasan" ("Auntie of Kamakura") was awarded the
Izumi Kyoka Prize .After Muramatsu appeared on
television commercial s forSuntory whiskey , and his line of “One Finger – Two Fingers” became a popular phrase in Japanese bars.
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