Yoshihiro Takahashi

Yoshihiro Takahashi
高橋義廣

Takahashi at the Suomalainen Kirjakauppa bookstore in Kamppi, Helsinki, Finland, 2011.
Born (1953-09-18) September 18, 1953
Higashinaruse, Akita, Japan
Nationality Japanese
Area(s) Manga artist
Notable works
Ginga: Nagareboshi Gin
Ginga Legend Weed
Awards Shogakukan Manga Award (1987)
Tezuka Award


Yoshihiro Takahashi (高橋義廣 Takahashi Yoshihiro) is a Japanese manga artist. He writes under a pen name in which his first name Yoshihiro is spelled out in hiragana (よしひろ).

Takahashi was born September 18, 1953, in Higashinaruse, Akita. He was very interested in drawing coming of age related themes, and, in the 1960s, started publishing small comics in several newspapers and magazines. His first manga was Shitamachi Benkei, but his breakthrough came in 1984 when he published the popular manga Ginga: Nagareboshi Gin, also known as Silver Fang, or Silver Fang Legend Gin, the story about a dog who goes in search of other dogs to fight a bear named Akakabuto. He got the idea in 1980 when he read an article about domestic dogs that ran away from their owners and lived as wild dogs in the mountains. The pure idea fascinated him, which led him to create the manga about the puppy. In 1987, the series won the Shogakukan Manga Award for shōnen manga.[1]

Takahashi started to publish the sequel, Ginga Densetsu Weed, in 1999 and it soon became a hit as well as an anime which aired on September 17, 2005. He has been touted as the first manga artist to draw manga featuring a puppy as hero.[2]

Takahashi was the guest of honour at the Finnish role-playing and anime fan convention Tracon in Tampere on September 3 and 4 2011.[3] It was his first visit to Finland and most likely his first time being a guest of honour outside Japan.[3]

Bibliography

Manga

Short stories

References

  1. 小学館漫画賞: 歴代受賞者 (in Japanese). Shogakukan. Archived from the original on September 29, 2007. Retrieved 2007-08-19.
  2. Ginga Legend Weed vol. 1, published by ComicsOne, the text inside the back cover
  3. 1 2 "Hopeanuolen isä kunniavieraaksi Traconiin" (in Finnish). Retrieved 2011-05-18.

Media related to Yoshihiro Takahashi at Wikimedia Commons


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