alya masuk ui, gaa?
LOLLL HAHAHAHA
they vibin’
drew this for a friend who used to be a chongyun main but is now a kazuha main
i love how the mangaka of umibe no etranger (kii kanna) potrays the character AND okinawa. i didnt know b4 that okinawa is that gorgeous 😭 The flowers, trees and the beach ughhhh i wanna go there so badly. but ofc, still, my favorite part is the bois, Hashimoto shun and Chibana mio! 💕 Seeing them laying in their room with opened door, just enjoying okinawan air together... the vibe is immaculate 😭😭 i wanna experience it 😭
kangen gojo
idk why the reason i tried to build yunjin several months ago (i lvl her up until 80). i think shes rlly pretty and starting to lvl her up and searching for her materials for weekkssss 😭 and ended up giving her artifacts to noelle cus idk what to do with her
this particular scene from sylus birthday card is so cute 😂😂
kazuha in the tokyo manji uniform!!!
My sanity leaves the room when it comes to this man
Hello, do we have any information about what happened with Dazai's family after his death. Your blog is awesome, keep up the good work and thank you so much for providing a place that is the first i think of when it comes to BSD asks 🙏🙏🙏
Thank you for the ask! And thank you for supporting my blog! There is not a ton of information, but I’ll do my best.
Dazai’s wife, Tsushima Michiko, was still involved in what happened to Dazai’s works. I have read a lot of translator’s notes who said that they got permission from Michiko to translate her late-husband’s works into English. After her husband’s death, Michiko was in charge of the family. They moved around a bit, in 1964 their son Masaki dies of pneumonia at 15 years old leaving only Michiko and their two daughters Yūko and Sonoko. Michiko also wrote a memorandum of Dazai that goes into detail about their life together. Michiko lived to be 85 years old.
Tsushima Yūko, Dazai’s daughter, became a writer like her father. She wrote fiction, essays, and literary criticisms (which was quite common in Japan). She went to collage in Chōfu, Tokyo, and while attending she published her first story. She won several literary prizes: “In 1972 her story “Pregnant with a Fox” (“Kitsune wo haramu”) was a runner-up for the Akutagawa Prize. She was awarded the Izumi Kyōka Prize for Literature in 1977 and the first annual Noma Prize for New Writers in 1979. In 1983 she was awarded the Kawabata Prize for her short story “The Silent Traders” (“Danmari ichi”) and in 1986 she won the Yomiuri Prize for her novel Driven by the Light of the Night (Yoru no hikari ni owarete). In 1998 she was awarded the 34th Tanizaki Prize and the 51st Noma Prize for her novel Mountain of Fire: Account Of A Wild Monkey (Hi no yama – yamazaruki)” (source).