Kaitarō Hasegawa

Fubo Hayashi (Japanese林 不忘; actually: Hasegawa Kaitarō (长谷川 海 太郎), born January 17, 1900 in Tokuwa, Akadomari, Sado -gun (now Sado ), Niigata Prefecture, † June 29, 1935 in Yukinoshita, Kamakura ) was a Japanese writer. He published under three different pseudonyms - next Hayashi fubo still Maki Itsuma (牧 逸 马) and Joji Tani (谷 譲 次) - each different writer personalities embodied.

Hayashi visited until 1917, the middle school in Hakodate and then went to the USA, where he was studying at Oberlin College, among others funded by working as a cook. After his return to Japan in 1924 he joined a group of crime writers to Yasushi Matsumoto. Here he learned Morishita Uson, for whose journal Shin- its ( New Youth ), he wrote the series Meriken Jappu under the name Tani Joji. A first volume of stories appeared in 1927 under the title Jappu Shobai orai.

As a novelist Hayashi fubo he created the character of the one-eyed and one-armed swordsman Tange Sazen. As Maki Itsuma he wrote mystery stories like Yokuso no hanayome ( The bride in the bathtub ).

1935 Hayashi died from acute bronchial asthma fubo. His brother Shiro Hasegawa became known as a writer.

Swell

  • Kamakura City, Kamakura 's Literary Figures - Biography
  • Bumblehood: Famous people in arts and culture of Chubu region - Biography
  • はこだて 人物 誌 長谷川 海太郎. Hakodate City, accessed 2 May 2010 ( Japanese).
  • Author
  • Literature (Japanese)
  • Literature ( 20th century)
  • Novel, epic
  • Japanese
  • Born 1900
  • Died in 1935
  • Man
  • Pseudonym
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