běn zuòzhělièbiǎo
chuān jùn tài láng Shuntaro Tanikawa xiè jīng Yosano Akikoshí chuān zhuó Takuboku Ishikawa
dǎo téng cūn Shimazakigāng yuán fèng Yuan Feng Gangchén shùn chén Chin Shunshin
chuān kǒu cháng Kawaguchi Changrushi yuán dēng Noboru Tsujigāo qiáo Takahashi apply
jiāng jiàn sān láng Kenzaburō Ōemào měi Moro Miyashān gāng zhuāng Yamaoka Sohachi
shān běn cháng cháo Chang Korean Yamamotoshí yuán jiēshí Ishihara strongbǎn dōng zhēn Mariko Bando
qiān 1000 叶丽子 tián qiān jīng Fu 田千晶gāo qiáo měi jiā Takahashi Meijia
zhōng liú měi Nakazawa Okinawa U.S. shí yuán Tateishi member sub-jīn tián miào Jin 田妙子
cháo míng Koosōng dǎo · Song Nakajima Asia nài Taiichi Ohno
tōng kǒu tài xíng Yasuyuki Higuchihǎi yīn cháo láng Kaionji Chogorojiá tián guāng xióng A 田光雄
dōng mào yóu Tung Mau by thehēi míng Akira Kurosawatóng shān guì Kiriyama Keiichi
jǐng shàng Inoue Du Fuzhòng xiù Shuichi Shigenojiā téng zhèng xiù Kato Masahide
zàng nuò zūn Izanagi respecttiān zhào shén Amaterasushén tiān huáng Emperor Jimmu
suí jìng tiān huáng Appeasement Emperorān níng tiān huáng Annei Tennō tiān huáng Itoku-tenno
xiào zhāo tiān huáng Kosho-tennoxiào 'ān tiān huáng Koan-tennoxiào líng tiān huáng Emperor Xiao Ling
xiào yuán tiān huáng Kogen-tennokāi huà tiān huáng Civilized Emperorchóng shén tiān huáng Emperor worship God
chuí rén tiān huáng Emperor Suininjǐng xíng tiān huáng Kageyuki Emperorchéng tiān huáng Emperor into service
zhòng 'āi tiān huáng Emperor Chuaishén gōng huáng hòu Jingū Kōgōyìng shén tiān huáng God Emperor should be
rén tiān huáng Emperor Ren zhōng tiān huáng To fulfill the Emperorfǎn zhèng tiān huáng Hanzei-tennō
yǔn gōng tiān huáng Ingō-tennōān kāng tiān huáng Ankō Tennōxióng lüè tiān huáng 雄略 Emperor
qīng níng tiān huáng Qing 宁天皇xiǎn zōng tiān huáng Exoteric Emperorrén xián tiān huáng Renxian Emperor
gāo bīn guāng Takagi Akimitsu
běn píng chéng shí dài  (1920niánjiǔyuè25rì1995niánjiǔyuè9rì)
gāo chéng

tuī zhēn tàn consecution detectivemíng xiǎn de shā

yuèdòugāo bīn guāng Takagi Akimitsuzài小说之家dezuòpǐn!!!
高木彬光
  gāo bīn guāng( 1920 nián 9 yuè 25 1995 nián 9 yuè 9 ), yuán míng gāo chéng shì wèi shēng běn qīng sēn de tuī xiǎo shuō zuò jiāzǎo nián chuàng zuò jiě tuī xiǎo shuōér zuò pǐn zhōng píng jià zuì gāo de shì zhōng hòu de shè huì pài zuò pǐnbāo kuòjiǎn chá guān dǎo sān láng》《 jiè cái pàn》《 bái zhòu de jiǎoděng
   jīng xué, 1948 nián biǎo xiǎo shuō chǔnǚ zuò qīng shā rén shì jiànhuò chéng gōngcóng kāi shǐ liǎo tuī xiǎo shuō jiā de shēng gāo bīn guāng de xiǎo shuō qíng jié jǐn còu kuài yán huó jié gòu fēi cháng yán jǐnyuè lái hěn xùn méi yòu shénme tuō dài shuǐ de chǎng miàn miáo xiě shuō biǎo xiàn rén xīn shì de cháng xiàng de wén fēi cháng qīng sōngdàn què kàn dào sǎnmàn jiàn wén gōng de shēn hòuàn jiàn de shè zhì qiǎo miào de tuī guò chéng hěn bìng qiě hěn yòu rén fēng
   gāo bīn guāng zài běn tuī xiǎo shuō shǐ zhǎn zhōng zhàn yòu zhī zhù yào yīn wéi kāi chuàng liǎo zhǒng xīn de tuī xiǎo shuō cái tíng pài bìng yáng guāng xià de zhù rén gōng duō shì shī huò jiǎn chá guān děng jiè rén shìtōng guò men zài suǒ jiē shǒu de 'àn jiàn de diào chá zhōng chōu jiǎn de tuī cóng 'ér zhǎo dào zhēn zhèng de zuì fànzài 'àn de guò chéng zhōnggāo shàn cháng chuān chā rén qíng gǎn de chōng máo dùncóng 'ér xiàn chū mǒu xiē shè huì wèn gāo guān hòu de chén men de xùn wǎng huò shì háo mén míng liú bèi hòu de chǒu 'è xiàn shízài de xiǎo shuō zhōngzhèng zhí de fāng wǎng wǎng shì nián qīng de jiǎn chá guān huò zhě shī men men cōng mínglěng jìngduì shēng huó yòu qíngbìng qiě zhèng zhí yán jǐnzài zhè lèi zhùjué rén zhōngjiǎn chá guān dǎo sān láng shì zào de shēn rén xīn de rén


  Akimitsu Takagi (高木 彬光 Takagi Akimitsu?, 25 September 1920–9 September 1995), was the pen-name of a popular Japanese crime fiction writer active during the Showa period of Japan. His real name was Takagi Seiichi.
  
  Biography
  
  Takagi was born in Aomori City in Aomori Prefecture in northern Japan. He graduated from the Daiichi High School (which was often abbreviated to Ichi-ko) and Kyoto Imperial University, where he studied metallurgy. He was employed by the Nakajima Aircraft Company, but lost his job with the prohibition on military industries in Japan after World War II.
  On the recommendation of a fortune-teller, he decided to become a writer. He sent the second draft of his first detective story, The Tattoo Murder Case, to the great mystery writer Edogawa Ranpo, who recognized his skill and who recommended it to a publisher. It was published in 1948.
  He received the Tantei sakka club sho (Mystery Writer Club Award) for his second novel, the Noh Mask Murder Case in 1950.
  Takagi was a self-taught legal expert and the heroes in most of his books were usually prosecutors or police detectives, although the protagonist in his first stories was Kyosuke Kamizu, an assistant professor at Tokyo University.
  Takagi explored variations on the detective novel in the 1960s, including historical mysteries, picaresque novels, legal mysteries, economic crime stories, and science fiction alternate history.
  In The Informer (1965), a former Tokyo stock exchange worker who is fired because of illegal trades. A subsequent stock market crash means that he has no hope of returning to his old career and therefore he accepts a job from an old friend even though he eventually discovers that the new firm he works for is really an agency for industrial espionage. The plot is based on actual events.
  He was struck by stroke several times since 1979, and died in 1995.
  
  Bibliography
  
  Tattoo Murder Case (1948) (刺青殺人事件)
  Noh Mask Murder Case (1949) (能面殺人事件)
  House of Spell (1949) (呪縛の家)
  Enchantresss Lodge (1949) (妖婦の宿)
  Crime in my Ichi-Ko days (1951) (我が一高時代の犯罪)
  Why Has the Doll Been Killed (1955) (人形はなぜ殺される)
  Mystery of Genghis Khan (1958) (成吉思汗の秘密)
  People Gathering like Ants (1959) (人蟻)
  Blind Spot in Broad Daylight (1960) (白昼の死角)
  Destructive Justice (1961) (破戒裁判)
  Prosecutor Saburo Kirishima (1964) (検事 霧島三郎)
  The Informer (1965) (密告者)
  Honeymoon to Nowhere (1965) (ゼロの蜜月)
  Combined Fleet Has Won at Last (1971) (連合艦隊ついに勝つ)
  Mystery of Yamataikoku (1973) (邪馬台国の秘密)
  Mystery of the early Japanese Emperors (1986) (古代天皇の秘密)
  Seven Lucky Gods Murder Case (1987) (七福神殺人事件)
  Goodbye Mask (1988) (仮面よ さらば)
  
  Reference
  
  Takagi, Akimitsu. Honeymoon to Nowhere. Soho Crime (1999). ISBN 1569471541.
  Takagi, Akimitsu. The Informer. Soho Crime (2001). ISBN 1569472432.
  Takagi, Akimitsu. The Tattoo Murder Case. Soho Crime (1999). ISBN 1569471568.
    

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