Jirō Nitta

Jirō Nitta (新田 次郎) is the pen name of popular Japanese historical novelist Hiroto Fujiwara (藤原 寛人). He was born in an area that is now part of the city of Suwa, Nagano Prefecture, Japan.

Career
His uncle was the famed meteorologist Sakuhei Fujiwara and his son is mathematician Masahiko Fujiwara. After retiring from the Japan Meteorological Agency, he began writing professionally. Originally a meteorologist, he wrote mainly on themes connected with mountains.

At least three of his documentary novels have been translated into English. Death March on Mount Hakkōda (八甲田山死の彷徨) is based on an incident in 1902 in the Hakkōda Mountains. Alaskan Tale (アラスカ物語) is about the adventures of Frank Yasuda.

Phantom Immigrants (密航船水安丸) deals with the Meiji era entrepreneur, Jinzaburo Oikawa (及川 甚三郎) from northern Miyagi prefecture, who went to Canada in 1896 to export salmon roe back to Japan. In 1906, he chartered the schooner Suianmaru to smuggle 82 fellow villagers out of Japan and into Canada. They were apprehended and arrested on Vancouver Island without passports but allowed to stay in Canada thanks to negotiations by Saburo Yoshie (吉江 三郎) (aka Fred Yoshy) of the Japanese consulate in Vancouver.

His 1973 two-volume novel Kokou no Hito (孤高の人) has been adapted into a manga series of the same title in which he is credited as writer.