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Sakunosuke oda
Sakunosuke oda










sakunosuke oda

Yokohama's city graveyard, the only place that proved Oda existed and wasn't some figment of your imagination. Soon enough you reached the destination you were travelling too. "Hashtag justice for jinko." You chuckled beneath your breath before continuing through the bustling crowd of citizens. Yokohama was filled with a wide variation of persona's. Next to him was a boy with white hair who was holding his hands up in surrender as he stuttered out excuses. The typical summer weather seemed to have a positive impact on most of the people you walked past- well, except for some random blonde dude in a ponytail who was rambling about some sort of schedule being ruined.

SAKUNOSUKE ODA FULL

To your dismay the day was full of sun and there were no clouds in sight. Upon your daily realization you let yourself break into small sobs before finally dragging yourself out of bed to go get some breakfast.

sakunosuke oda

It was just you in this empty house that the two of you dreamed of growing old in and raising a family in now all a dream that would never come true. Every morning now you would wake up and would hold a hand out for the man to still be there. The way they offered their condolences but no matter how many times one apologized it wouldn't bring him back. You remember the way you broke down right in front of them. "We regret to inform you that Sakunosuke Oda has been found dead in a battle with Mimic." Of course you were worried sick about him but that day when the cops were standing on your doorstep you knew something was terribly wrong. The next morning however, Oda was gone and he didn't return. Despite your shock you stayed and told him you'd always be with him. He often dreamed of becoming a writer but said it could never happen. He completely broke down as he told you everything, that he was a mafioso, that the five orphans you two visited were killed and his past full of bloodshed. You remember the night he came home looking broken. Oda Sakunosuke a man who worked for the Port Mafia despite being one of the lowest ranked members, a man who never used a gun unless provoked. Every morning for the last four years you thought it was all a bad dream and that when you woke up your lover would be there to kiss away the pain but this was real he's dead. A (S/C) hand reached out to the space on their right only to be greeted to empty sheets prompting (E/C) irises to open noticing the sudden absence. The photograph shows Oda apparently writing while seated at a table in Jiyuken.The only thing that could be heard in the bedroom was the ruffle of sheets as a certain someone turned over in their bed.

sakunosuke oda

The inscription says that Oda has died, but has left us some of the good flavor of curry rice in his writing. Jiyuken opened as a coffee and snack shop in 1910, and has become known for its style of "curry rice". An autographed photograph of Oda hangs in the Osaka restaurant Jiyuken. It is awarded annually to an outstanding work of fiction by a new author. In 1983, under the sponsorship of the Osaka Bungaku Shinkokai, a literary prize was established in Oda's name to commemorate the 70th anniversary of his birth and with the aim of carrying on the long tradition of Kansai literature. Hozenji Yokocho and its surrounding alleys are one of the main settings in Meoto Zenzai. In 1963, a monument was erected by Oda's friends and colleagues near Hozenji Temple in Osaka. In 1947, after suffering from a lung hemorrhage, Oda died in Tokyo Hospital.

sakunosuke oda

In addition to his fiction, Oda wrote many critical essays, most notably "Kanosei no bungaku" (The Literature of Possibility, 1946). Oda also wrote radio drama scenarios and submitted a script to a magazine that was later made into the film "Kaette kita otoko" (The Returnee, 1944), by Kawashima Yuzo (it was the director's commercial debut). The following year, Oda published "Meoto Zenzai". In 1939, his story "Zokushu" was a candidate for the Akutagawa Prize. A native of Osaka, he wrote mostly of life in that city and the customs and manners of the common people there. Oda’s writing career spans both prewar and postwar Japan. Sakunosuke Oda studied at the Third Higher School in Kyoto without graduating from it. He opposed Shishosetsu, or autobiographical novels, and advocated a "literature of possibility." Written at a time when writing was difficult because of the war, it was a novel descriptive of contemporary morals and manners. His debut as writer was made with his novel, Myoto Zenzai (1940).












Sakunosuke oda