San'ya, Tokyo's largest day-laborer quarter and the only one
with lodgings, had been Oyama Shiro's home for twelve years when he
took up his pen and began writing about his life as a resident of
Tokyo's most notorious neighborhood. After completing a university
education, Oyama entered the business workforce and appeared
destined to walk the same path as many a "salaryman." A singular
temperament and a deep loathing of conformity, however, altered his
career trajectory dramatically. Oyama left his job and moved to
Osaka, where he lived for three years. Later he returned to the
corporate world but fell out of it again, this time for good. After
spending a short time on the streets around Shinjuku, home to
Tokyo's bustling entertainment district, he moved to San'ya in
1987, at the age of forty.
Oyama acknowledges his eccentricity and his inability to adapt
to corporate life. Spectacularly unsuccessful as a salaryman yet
uncomfortable in his new surroundings, he portrays himself as an
outsider both from mainstream society and from his adopted home. It
is precisely this outsider stance, however, at once dispassionate
yet deeply engaged, that caught the eye of Japanese readers. The
book was published in Japan in 2000 after Oyama had submitted his
manuscript on a lark, he confesses for one of Japan's top literary
awards, the Kaiko Takeshi Prize. Although he was astounded actually
to win the award, Oyama remained in character and elected to
preserve the anonymity that has freed him from all social bonds and
obligations. The Cornell edition contains a new afterword by Oyama
regarding his career since his inadvertent brush with fame."
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