Shigeru Mizuki, a beloved household name in Japan, was an art
student when he was drafted in 1942 and sent to fight in New
Guinea, where he lost his left arm and witnessed scenes that
haunted him for the rest of his life.
Debuting in 1957, Mizuki went on to write manga dealing with the
U.S. wartime bombing, the abuse he and other military recruits
suffered under their emperor-worshipping commanders during World
War Two, and a biography of Adolf Hitler.
In 1979, he illustrated "The Darkness of the Fukushima Nuclear
Reactor" about the lives of workers at the Fukushima nuclear
plant that was crippled by the March 11, 2011, earthquake and
tsunami.
A 1991 piece in an educational magazine depicted wartime abuses
committed by Japanese soldiers in China and Korea, including one
scene where a soldier boasts of testing his new sword on "five
or six" civilians.
But he was probably best known for "Ge-ge-ge no Kitaro," a manga
series about a young ghost boy fighting off a series of monsters
based on Japanese folklore that was subsequently made into an
animated series that ran for several years.
(Reporting by Elaine Lies; Editing by Nick Macfie)
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