Hiroyuki Morioka

Hiroyuki Morioka
Born (1962-03-02) March 2, 1962
Kobe, Hyōgo Prefecture, Japan
Occupation novelist, short story writer
Nationality Japanese
Period 1992present
Genre Science Fiction, Space Opera, Fantasy
Notable works Crest of the Stars

Hiroyuki Morioka (森岡 浩之 Morioka Hiroyuki) (born March 2, 1962, Hyōgo Prefecture, Japan) is a Japanese science fiction novelist.

Biography

In 1992, his first novel Yume no Ki ga Tsugeta nara ("If Only the Dream Trees Could Touch") appeared in Hayakawa Shobo (Tokyo)'s SF Magazine. His short story "Spice" won the Hayakawa Award[1] in 1993.

In 1996, he published his first long novel in three volumes, Seikai no Monshou (Seikai no Monshō/Crest of the Stars). In the next year 1997 Seikai no Monsho was awarded with Seiun Award[2] at the Japan SF Convention. He released its sequel Seikai no Senki (Banner of the Stars), where he said that Seikai no Monsho was actually an overture to Seikai no Senki. Morioka had already suggested in Seikai no Monshou 2 that the entire series should narrate the life of Princess Lamhirh (aka Lafiel), from her birth to her eventual ascension to the imperial throne. Five volumes of Seikai no Senki are now available, with Morioka naming the first three the "Diahoc Trilogy", but the series itself has not yet finished. An English translation of "Seikai no Monshō/Crest of the Stars" has been published by Tokyopop, which came out from the fall of 2006 to May 2007.

Aside from the Seikai series, he published another Senki in 4 volumes, based on Japanese mythology, as well as a two-volume series, Seikai no Danshō (Fragments of the Stars), a collection of stories set in the same universe as the other two series.

His characteristics as a writer include a deep interest for linguistics (especially for conlangs), artificial intelligence, bitter humor, and well-designed world settings.

Bibliography

Stars (星界 Seikai) Series

The War Between Moon and Fire (月と炎の戦記 Tsuki To Honoo No Senki) Series

Gentle Purgatory (優しい煉獄 Yasashii rengoku) Series

Awards

Notes and references

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/24/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.