HIROMI KAWAKAMI was born in Tokyo in 1958. Her first novel,
Kamisama (God), was published in 1994. In 1996, she was awarded the Akutagawa Prize for "Hebi o Fumu" ("A Snake Stepped On"), and in 2001, she won the Tanizaki Prize for her novel
Sensei no Kaban (
Strange Weather in Tokyo), which became an international bestseller.
Strange Weather in Tokyo was short-listed for the 2013 Man Asian Literary Prize and the 2014 Independent Foreign Fiction Prize. Kawakami has contributed to editions of Granta in both the U.K. and Japan and is one of Japan's most popular contemporary novelists. Her previous novel in English translation,
Under the Eye of the Big Bird, was short-listed for the International Booker Prize.
TED GOOSSEN taught Japanese literature and film at York University in Toronto. He is the general editor of
The Oxford Book of Short Stories, the co-editor of the literary journal
Monkey, and has published translations of Hiromi Kawakami, Yoko Ogawa and Naoya Shiga, among others. He translated Haruki Murakami's
Wind/Pinball and
The Strange Library, and co-translated (with Philip Gabriel)
Men Without Women and
Killing Commendatore.