Toh EnJoe, Date of Birth, Place of Birth

    

Toh EnJoe

Japanese author

Date of Birth: 15-Sep-1972

Place of Birth: Sapporo, Hokkaidō Prefecture, Japan

Profession: writer, novelist, science fiction writer

Nationality: Japan

Zodiac Sign: Virgo

Social Profiles:

Show Famous Birthdays Today, Japan

👉 Worldwide Celebrity Birthdays Today

About Toh EnJoe

  • Toh EnJoe (Japanese: ?? ?, Hepburn: Enjo To, pen name, also written as EnJoeToh) (born September 15, 1972) is a Japanese author.
  • His works are usually literary fiction, speculative fiction or science fiction. Born in 1972 in Sapporo.
  • He graduated from the physics department of Tohoku University, then went on to the graduate school at University of Tokyo and received Ph.D.
  • for a mathematical physical study on the natural languages.
  • He worked as a post-doc researcher at several research institutes for seven years, then abandoned the academic career in 2007 and found a programmer job at a software firm (resigns in 2008 to become a full-time writer). In 2006, he submitted Self-Reference ENGINE to a science-fiction novel contest Komatsu Sakyo Award.
  • Although it did not win the award (none did in this year), it was published from Hayakawa Shobo in 2007.
  • At almost same time, his short story "Obu za besboru" ("Of The Baseball") won the contest of literary magazine Bungakukai, which became his debut in literary fiction.His literary fictions are often dense with allusions.
  • Labyrinthine annotations were added to "Uyushitan" when it was published in book form in 2009, where there were none when published initially in literary magazine. Often, his science fiction works take motif from mathematics.
  • The narrator of "Boy's Surface" (2007) is a morphism, and the title is a reference to a geometrical notion.
  • In "Moonshine" (2009), natural numbers are sentient through a savant's mind's eye in a field of the monster group. Project Itoh's Genocidal Organ was also a finalist of Komatsu Sakyo Award contest and published from Hayakawa Shobo in 2007, along with Enjoe's Self-Reference ENGINE.
  • Since then they often appeared together at science fiction conventions and interviews, and collaborated in a few works, until Itoh's death of cancer in 2009.
  • At the press conference after the announcement of Enjoe's Akutagawa Prize in January 2012, he revealed the plan to complete Itoh's unfinished novel Shisha no teikoku.
  • It was published in August 2012, and received the Special Award of Nihon SF Taisho.

Read more at Wikipedia