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.
"Anyone curious in how the Japanese see themselves will find this
book a fascinating, and ultimately highly disturbing, experience."
- Publishers Weekly
"From its eerie opening to its chilling conclusion, this novel by
the "Stephen King of Asia" will keep readers glued to its pages." -
Library Journal
"But Suzuki is plowing a path that nobody else has traveled, as his
'Ring'-virus is born into an all-too vulnerable world. There are so
many extremely clever riffs that never made it into either movie
that readers aren't likely to notice how wide the road recently
traveled is until they catch their breath and manage to look back."
- Agony Columns
"Suzuki's ambitious trilogy does succeed, and it's hard not to be
impressed with his aplomb in turning a straight supernatural horror
mystery around into a piece of pure science fiction." - TIMES
"Suzuki is called the Stephen King of his country, but that's not
really accurate; King isn't nearly as adept at creating complex
characters, explaining scientific principles or writing the kind of
dialogue that might actually be spoken by humans." - Las Vegas
Mercury
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