
Yasushi Inoue (井上靖) was a Japanese writer whose range of genres included poetry, essays, short fiction, and novels. Inoue is famous for his serious historical fiction of ancient Japan and the Asian continent, including Wind and Waves, Tun-huang, and Confucius, but his work also included semi-autobiographical novels and short fiction of great humor, pathos, and wisdom like Shirobamba and Asunaro Monogatari, which depicted the setting of the author's own life—Japan of the early to mid twentieth century—in revealing perspective. 1936 Chiba Kameo Prize —- Ruten,流転 1950 Akutagawa Prize —- Tōgyu,闘牛 1957 Ministry of Education Prize for Literature —- The Roof Tile of Tempyo,天平の甍 1959 Mainichi Press Prize —- Tun-huang,敦煌 1963 Yomiuri Prize —- Fūtō,風濤 (from Wikipedia)
Books

The Hunting Gun
1949

Confucius
1989

Bullfight
1949

Yodo's Diary (1964)
1960

Mi madre
1975

Lou-Lan and Other Stories
1968

The Story of Yang Guifei
1963

Le Maître de thé
1981

Ice Wall (1963)
1956

Furin Kazan
1953

The Blue Wolf
A Novel of the Life of Chinggis Khan
1959

Shirobamba
1991

Wind and Waves
1963

Modern Japanese Short Stories
Twenty-Five Stories by Japan's Leading Writers
1962

Amore
1950

Roof Tile of Tempyo
1957

Life of a Counterfeiter
1949

Tun-huang
1959

Les dimanches de monsieur Ushioda
2000