Hoshi Shinichi, a Japanese science fiction writer who left over 1000 short short works. What was the future that was conceived in works several decades ago? Let's compare it with current events.
Cars fly in the sky, robots do work on behalf of humans ... SF writers around the world have painted such a bright future. All of these works were based on rich imagination, and it was not uncommon to say that "After all, they are nothing more than fancy."
However, there are many cases where what is now commonplace in 2017 is actually predicted in science fiction novels several decades ago. It is no exaggeration to say that science fiction writers were prophets. Indeed, Jules Verne predicts that people traveling to the Moon on a "Moon World Tour" more than 100 years ago, and HG Wells predicts that "space war" has life on a non-Earth star. The
The feature is also seen intensely from the work of science fiction writer, Hoshi Shinichi, who drew various futures with more than 1,000 short shorts.
This time, we compare things that were predicted in such a star Shinichi work with reality.
Shinichi Hoshi (星 新一 Hoshi Shin'ichi, September 6, 1926 – December 30, 1997) was a Japanese novelist and science fiction writer best known for his "short-short" science fiction stories, often no more than three or four pages in length, of which he wrote over 1000. He also wrote mysteries and won the Mystery Writers of Japan Award for Mōsō Ginkō (Delusion Bank) in 1968.
One of his short stories, "Bokko-chan" ("Miss Bokko"), was translated into English and published in Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction in June 1963. His books translated into English include There Was a Knock, a collection of 15 stories, and The Spiteful Planet and Other Stories.
His friend Osamu Tezuka used his name for a character in Amazing 3, a manga and anime series which Tezuka produced in 1967.
His grandmother on his mother's side, Kimiko Koganei, was the sister of Mori Ōgai.
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日本、〒171-0021 東京都豊島区西池袋1丁目8−1 Map
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