Mado was born as Michio Ishida in Tokuyama, Yamaguchi prefecture. During his childhood, he resided with his grandfather while his parents went to work in Taiwan. He later reunited with his family in Taiwan. He completed his education at the School of Industrial Instruction in Taipei and subsequently worked for the Office of the Governor-General. Mado died on February 28, 2014, at the age of 104.[3]
Royal patronage
Empress Michiko took a keen interest in Mado's works.[4] She has been a fan of poetry. In June 2013, two collections of the poetry of Mado, which the Empress had been asked to translate into English in the early Heisei era, Rainbow: Niji and Eraser: Keshigomu, were published. Together with her previously published translations of Mado's poetry, including The Animals: Dobutsu-tachi, the publication of these new books means almost all the translations by the Empress of Mado's poems, which earned him the Hans Christian Andersen Award in 1994, are now published.[4]
Awards
Noma Children's Literature Award for the collection of poems Tempura Piripiri (1968)
Japanese Children's Literature Scholars Association Award for Shokubutsu no uta (1976)