Miri Yu

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Yu Miri (柳美里 Yū Miri; born June 22, 1968) is a Korean-Japanese playwright, novelist, and essayist. Yu writes in Japanese, her native language, and is a citizen of South Korea.

Yu was born in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan, to Korean parents. After dropping out of high school, she joined the Tokyo Kid Brothers (東京キッドブラザース) theater troupe and worked as an actress and assistant director. In 1986, she formed a troupe called Seishun Gogetsudō (青春五月堂), and the first of several plays written by her was published in 1991.

In the early 1990s, Yu switched to writing prose. Her novels include Furu Hausu (フルハウス, "Full House", 1996); Kazoku Shinema (家族シネマ, "Family Cinema," 1997), which won the prestigious Akutagawa Prize; Gōrudo Rasshu (ゴールドラッシュ, 1998), which was translated into English as Gold Rush (2002); and Hachi-gatsu no Hate (8月の果て, "The End of August," 2004). She has published a dozen books of essays and memoirs, and she is an editor of and contributor to the literary quarterly en-taxi. Her memoir Inochi (命, "Life") was made into a movie, also titled Inochi.

Yu's first novel, a semiautobiographical work titled Ishi ni Oyogu Sakana (石に泳ぐ魚, "The Fish Swimming in the Stone") published in the September 1994 issue of the literary journal Shinchō, became the focus of a legal and ethical controversy. The model for one of the novel's main characters—and the person referred to indirectly by the title—objected to her depiction in the story. The publication of the novel in book form was blocked by court order, and some libraries restricted access to the magazine version. After a prolonged legal fight and widespread debate over the rights of authors, readers, and publishers versus individuals' rights to privacy, a revised version of the novel was published in 2002.

Yu lives in Tokyo and has one son.

Yu Miri's Web site (in Japanese): La Valse de Miri