His literary career began in 1962 with the publication of his debut work Kodomobeya (lit. "Children's room"), for which he received the Bungakukai Newcomer Award (Bungakukai shinjinshō).[1][2] Most of his stories draw upon his biography and his family in a contemporary I-novel style known as "mental state novel" (shinkyō shōsetsu).[3] Other major works include the 1970 novel Shirei no kyūka (lit. "The commander's holiday") about his military officer father, and the 1972 short story Peaches (Momo), which, like Kodomobeya, deals with personal childhood memories. He received the Mainichi Publishing Culture Award for his 1973 short story Sennen (lit. "Thousand years").[1]
Abe died of heart failure at the age of 54.[1][2] A fourteen volume edition of his collected works, Abe Akira shū, was published by Iwanami Shoten in 1991–1992.[4]
Selected works
1962: Kodomobeya
1970: Shirei no kyūka
1970: Friends (Hibi no tomo)
1972: Peaches (Momo)
1973: Sennen
1976: Jinsei no ichinichi
1982: A Napping Cove (Madoromu irie)
Translations
Of Abe's short stories, Friends,[5][6]Peaches[7] and A Napping Cove[8] have been translated into English. The novel Shirei no kyūka has been translated into German as Urlaub für die Ewigkeit.[9]
^Abe, Akira (1985). "Friends". In Gessel, Van C.; Matsumoto, Tomone (eds.). The Shōwa Anthology: Modern Japanese Short Stories. Volume 2 1961–1984. Tokyo: Kodansha International.
^Schlant, Ernestine; Rimer, J. Thomas, eds. (1991). Legacies and Ambiguities: Postwar Fiction and Culture in West Germany and Japan. Washington DC: Woodrow Wilson Center Press. p. 221. ISBN9780943875323.
^Hibbett, Howard, ed. (1977). Contemporary Japanese Literature : an Anthology of Fiction, Film, and Other Writing Since 1945. Knopf/Random House. ISBN9780394733623.
^Abe, Akira (1984). "A Napping Cove". Japanese Literature Today. Vol. 9. Translated by Harbison, Mark. Japan P.E.N. Club. pp. 11–23.
^Abe, Akira (1994). Urlaub für die Ewigkeit. Berlin: BeBra Verlag. ISBN978-3-86124-186-7.