Koji Suzuki was born in 1957 in Hamamatsu, southwest of Tokyo. He
attended Keio University where he majored in French. After
graduating he held numerous odd jobs, including a stint as a cram
school teacher. Also a self-described jock, he holds a first-class
yachting license and crossed the U.S., from Key West to Los
Angeles, on his motorcycle.
The father of two daughters, Suzuki is a respected authority on
childrearing and has written numerous works on the subject. He
acquired his expertise when he was a struggling writer and
househusband. Suzuki also has translated a children's book into
Japanese, The Little Sod Diaries by the crime novelist Simon
Brett.
In 1990, Suzuki's first full-length work, Paradise won the
Japanese Fantasy Novel Award and launched his career as a fiction
writer. Ring, written with a baby on his lap, catapulted him
to fame, and the multi-million selling sequels Spiral and
Loop cemented his reputation as a world-class talent. Often
called the "Stephen King of Japan," Suzuki has played a crucial
role in establishing mainstream credentials for horror novels in
his country. He is based in Tokyo but loves to travel, often in the
United States. Birthday is his sixth novel to appear in
English.
"Suzuki has a flair for cinematic descriptions that leap off the
page, resulting ingripping stories that just might give you
nightmares." - Mark Rifkin mark.rifkin@twi-ny.com.
"If the "interpretation of dreams are the royal road to the
unconscious," as Sigmund Freud once said, Birthday by Koji
Suzuki is a highway to the horrors of human evil." - Foreword
Magazine
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