ZOO nominated for Shirley Jackson award!

By Nick Mamatas April 15, 2010

We've been sitting on this all week, but now we can finally announce that Otsuichi's ZOO has been nominated for Best Short Story Collection for this year's Shirley Jackson awards.


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Shirley Jackson needs no introduction, but the awards might. The Jacksons celebrate "the literature of psychological suspense, horror, and the dark fantastic," but like the author for which they are named, the awards go far beyond "genre" norms. Jackson's most famous short story, "The Lottery" was published first in The New Yorker to a tsunami of complaints about how horrid the tale was...and to more than a few letters from would-be lookie-loos requesting the location of the town where the annual lottery takes place—the story was so compelling that to many it seemed real.

(By the way, the answer is West Bennington, Vermont. See you there this summer!)

Otsuichi isn't even the first Japanese writer to be so lauded. Last year literary author Yoko Ogawa won the category for her The Diving Pool, a collection of novellas, some of which had previously appeared in The New Yorker as well. (Check out Pregnancy Diary for some literary chills.) Will Ogawa serve as a bellwhether for Otsuichi? I'd like to think so. As a short story lover, the decline of the form in the US is a sad state of affairs, but short subjects are booming in Japan, perhaps because most major publishers have both literary and commercial fiction magazines in which they cultivate new talent. (The commuter culture helps too, I suspect. A story is often one train trip's length.) Can Superior Japanese Storytelling Technology in Translation defeat the rest of the world again?

I don't know if our resident "strange one" will ever make the pages of The New Yorker or any other slick American magazine, but he's been doing pretty well. In addition to the Jackson nod, two ZOO tales—"The White House in the Cold Forest" and In a Park at Twilight, a Long Time Ago received Honorable Mentions in Ellen Datlow's annual best-of anthology, Best Horror of the Year, volume 2. Sweet!

In Japan, horror is summertime reading. Forget pumpkins and brown and orange leaves crunching under one's feet, the dark stuff is associated with the blazing sun. Horror gives you chills after all, and that'll serve to cool a reader down on a sultry Asian night. The Shirley Jackson award winners will be announced at Readercon in July, so maybe it'll be a lucky time of year. And a win would be a great kick off for our next Otsuichi title, which...

ell, which you'll see in stores just in time for the summer to end and Halloween season to begin.