Osamu Dazai Author ((exclusive)) ●

For readers interested in exploring Dazai's works, and "The Setting Sun" are excellent starting points. His writing offers a unique window into the complexities of Japanese culture and society, as well as the universal struggles of the human condition.

Dazai’s writing is characterized by a conversational, almost confessional tone. He had a unique ability to make the reader feel like a co-conspirator in his suffering. While his themes are often dark—suicide, addiction, and failure—his prose is frequently shot through with a self-deprecating wit and a profound, if fragile, beauty. Osamu Dazai Author

Born Shūji Tsushima on June 19, 1909, in Kanagi, Aomori Prefecture (the northern tip of Honshu), came from extreme wealth. His family was among the richest landowners in the region—rural aristocracy. On the surface, his childhood was comfortable; in reality, it was a psychological battlefield. For readers interested in exploring Dazai's works, and

What makes No Longer Human so disturbing—and so brilliant—is its total honesty. Dazai does not romanticize the suffering. He shows the degradation: the bedbugs, the hangovers, the petty theft, the pathetic attempts at connection. For readers struggling with depression, anxiety, or imposter syndrome, Yozo Oba feels uncomfortably familiar. He had a unique ability to make the

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