Real Authors Library

Every character in BSD is a real person. Every ability is a real book. Pull one thread and you’re suddenly reading about 20th century literature without realizing it. That’s the trick.

13 Authors  ·  Japanese · American · Russian · British · Irish

Section One

Japanese Authors

1909 – 1948  ·  Japanese

Osamu Dazai

太宰 治

BSD Ability: No Longer Human

One of Japan’s most celebrated and controversial authors. His semi-autobiographical novel No Longer Human (1948) — the second most widely read book in Japanese literary history — is a confessional about a man who cannot feel like a real human being and is consumed by a death wish.

The real Dazai made multiple suicide attempts throughout his life and died by drowning with his lover in 1948, the same year the novel was published. He was 38.

Why It Matters in BSD

The BSD Dazai’s constant suicidal comedy is not entirely comedy. His power — nullifying any ability — is the literary wound made tactical: the inability to feel what everyone else feels, externalized as the ability to cancel everyone else’s gifts.

1892 – 1927  ·  Japanese

Ryunosuke Akutagawa

芥川 龍之介

BSD Ability: Rashōmon

Japan’s most celebrated short story writer. His work — particularly Rashōmon and In a Bamboo Grove — explored the collapse of moral certainty and the darkness underneath civilized behavior. Died by suicide at 35, leaving a note that described a “vague anxiety” about the future.

The Akutagawa Prize — Japan’s most prestigious literary award for new authors — is named after him. It is awarded twice yearly and remains the highest honor in Japanese fiction.

Why It Matters in BSD

Rashōmon is about the collapse of moral absolutes — a man does evil to survive and becomes indistinguishable from what he condemned. The BSD Akutagawa lives in this exact space: brilliant, brittle, trained to destruction, unable to stop.

1900 – 1937  ·  Japanese

Chuuya Nakahara

中原 中也

BSD Ability: Upon the Tainted Sorrow

A celebrated Taisho and early Showa era poet defined by passion, grief, and lyric intensity. His poem The Soiled Snow — the source of the BSD ability name — is one of his most representative works. The real Dazai Osamu deeply admired Nakahara’s poetry.

He died young, at 30, from tubercular meningitis. His output was small but considered essential to modern Japanese poetry.

Why It Matters in BSD

The real Dazai admired the real Nakahara. BSD inverted this completely — making them bitter rivals with absolute mutual dependency. The admiration became friction. The literary relationship became the combat dynamic.

1835 – 1901  ·  Japanese

Yukichi Fukuzawa

福沢 諭吉

BSD Ability: All Men Are Equal

One of the most influential figures of the Meiji era — a writer, educator, and reformer who argued for equal opportunity through learning and self-improvement. His most famous work An Encouragement of Learning opened with the line: “Heaven does not create one person above or below another.”

Why It Matters in BSD

His ability — All Men Are Equal — grants his subordinates full control over their own powers. A direct translation of his real philosophy: elevate everyone, give them the tools to stand on their own. He built the ADA on this principle.

1872 – 1916  ·  Japanese

Mori Ogai

森 鷗外

BSD Ability: Vita Sexualis

A giant of Meiji-era literature and one of Japan’s first authors to seriously engage Western literary traditions. He was also a military surgeon and surgeon-general of the Japanese army. Vita Sexualis — his most controversial novel — was banned shortly after publication for obscenity.

Why It Matters in BSD

BSD named the Port Mafia boss’s ability after the banned novel — appropriate for a character who became boss by killing his predecessor and operates entirely outside conventional morality. The surgeon background shows up too: Mori’s calm clinical detachment is very much the army doctor.

1878 – 1942  ·  Japanese

Kyūsaku Yumeno

夢野 久作

BSD Ability: Dogra Magra

Master of Japanese avant-garde gothic fiction. His novel Dogra Magra (1935) — one of Japan’s three great “strange novels” — took over ten years to write. It follows an amnesiac psychiatric patient who cannot separate his own consciousness from the experiments being performed on him. Readers report genuine psychological disorientation finishing it.

Why It Matters in BSD

Q’s curse forces hallucinations onto others — they cannot distinguish threat from safety, just like the novel’s protagonist cannot distinguish his own mind from external manipulation. Q’s hatred of hospitals comes directly from the source material. Full Q profile →

Section Two

American Authors

1896 – 1940  ·  American

F. Scott Fitzgerald

BSD Ability: The Great Fitzgerald

Author of The Great Gatsby — the definitive American novel about the illusion that wealth and ambition can purchase anything, including things that cannot be bought. Fitzgerald himself lived this: enormous success followed by financial ruin and literary obscurity before his death at 44.

Why It Matters in BSD

BSD Fitzgerald literally burns money to gain strength. His whole story arc is about discovering the one thing it cannot purchase. The Gatsby thesis — money as substitute for what’s truly lost — plays out in every scene he’s in.

1809 – 1849  ·  American

Edgar Allan Poe

BSD Ability: Unfinished

Widely credited as the inventor of the detective fiction genre and a master of gothic horror. His works include The Murders in the Rue Morgue, The Tell-Tale Heart, and The Raven. He directly inspired the real Ranpo Edogawa, who named himself after Poe.

Died mysteriously at 40 under circumstances never fully explained.

Why It Matters in BSD

BSD Poe traps enemies inside his detective novels — escape requires solving the mystery. He carries a raccoon named Karl. He becomes genuinely fond of Ranpo after their battle, mirroring the real literary relationship between the two authors across time.

1890 – 1937  ·  American

H.P. Lovecraft

BSD Ability: The Great Old One

Creator of the Cthulhu Mythos — a cosmos of ancient entities so far beyond human understanding that merely perceiving them causes madness. His work defined the “cosmic horror” genre: the universe is indifferent, incomprehensible, and the worst thing you can do is understand how small you are.

The real Lovecraft was one of Yumeno Kyūsaku’s primary literary inspirations.

Why It Matters in BSD

BSD takes this entirely literally. Lovecraft is not human — he is one of those entities, participating under contract. After defeat he walks into the ocean. Q’s curse cannot touch him because you cannot drive mad something that was never human. The literary genealogy (Lovecraft → Yumeno) becomes combat logic.

1835 – 1910  ·  American

Mark Twain

BSD Ability: The Adventures of Tom Sawyer

One of America’s most celebrated authors. The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and Adventures of Huckleberry Finn defined American vernacular fiction. Known for sharp social satire wrapped in deceptively playful prose — never as simple as he appeared.

Why It Matters in BSD

BSD Twain uses Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn as twin sniper paper dolls. Playful exterior, deadly precision — exactly the real Twain’s literary personality. Treats combat like an adventure because the real Twain treated everything like one.

1902 – 1968  ·  American

John Steinbeck

BSD Ability: The Grapes of Wrath

Nobel Prize-winning author whose work documented the suffering of ordinary Americans during the Great Depression. The Grapes of Wrath (1939) — his masterwork — follows a displaced farming family driven from their land, rooted in the earth and enduring through it.

Why It Matters in BSD

BSD Steinbeck grows massive grape vines from seeds planted in his own bloodstream — literally rooted in himself, drawing power from the earth, enduring through it. The Grapes of Wrath is about surviving by staying connected to the land. The ability is that metaphor made physical.

1874 – 1942  ·  Canadian

Lucy Maud Montgomery

BSD Ability: Anne of Abyssal Red

Author of the beloved Anne of Green Gables series — warm, domestic, deeply tied to the idea of home and belonging. One of Canada’s most internationally recognized authors. The contrast between her source material and her BSD ability is one of the series’ sharpest jokes.

Why It Matters in BSD

BSD Lucy traps people inside an infinite house called Anne of Abyssal Red — taking the warmth and safety of Green Gables and inverting it into a prison. The real author wrote about finding home. The BSD character weaponizes the concept of home itself.

Section Three

Russian Authors

1821 – 1881  ·  Russian

Fyodor Dostoevsky

Фёдор Михайлович Достоевский

BSD Ability: Crime and Punishment

One of the greatest novelists in world literature. Survived a mock execution and years in a Siberian prison camp before producing his greatest works. Crime and Punishment follows a man who commits murder based on an intellectual theory that certain people are exempt from conventional morality. The Brothers Karamazov, The Idiot, and Demons explore guilt, redemption, faith, and the darkness inside moral certainty.

Why It Matters in BSD

BSD Fyodor genuinely believes his reasoning places him above ordinary human constraint — he will eliminate all ability users, whom he considers sinful, using deeply sinful methods to do so. The real novel’s central question — does intellectual superiority exempt someone from morality? — is the BSD character’s entire operating thesis. He carries all of Dostoevsky’s coldness and none of his redemption.

1809 – 1852  ·  Russian / Ukrainian

Nikolai Gogol

Николай Васильевич Гоголь

BSD Ability: The Overcoat

A foundational figure in Russian literature, Gogol blended dark comedy, the grotesque, and social satire. His short story The Overcoat — about a low-ranking clerk whose identity becomes bound to a single coat — is considered one of the most influential short stories in world literature. Dostoyevsky supposedly said “We all came out from under Gogol’s overcoat.”

Why It Matters in BSD

BSD Gogol’s ability turns his cloak into a portal to a pocket dimension — the overcoat as escape hatch, as identity, as the thing that contains everything. He dresses as a circus ringmaster, pretends to be a psychotic killer while entirely sane, and feels genuine guilt for every murder he commits. Dark comedy wearing a costume. Exactly Gogol.

Section Four

British & Irish Authors

1847 – 1912  ·  Irish

Bram Stoker

BSD Ability: Dracula

Author of Dracula (1897) — the novel that defined the modern vampire in Western imagination. Stoker worked as a theatre manager for most of his life and wrote Dracula over seven years of research, drawing on Eastern European folklore, contemporary anxieties about disease and contagion, and the gothic tradition.

Why It Matters in BSD

BSD takes the most literal possible reading: Bram Stoker’s ability infects others and turns them into vampires he controls, spreading with terrifying speed. The contagion anxiety that runs through the real novel — disease, contamination, transformation without consent — is the entire ability.

1878 – 1942  ·  Japanese

Akiko Yosano

与謝野 晶子

BSD Ability: Thou Shalt Not Die

One of Japan’s most important and controversial feminist poets. Her poem Thou Shalt Not Die was written to her brother during the Russo-Japanese War — a direct, furious plea not to sacrifice himself for the Emperor. It caused a national scandal. She wrote it anyway.

Why It Matters in BSD

BSD Yosano heals any wound — but only near-fatal ones. She must bring patients to the edge of death to save them. The real poet refused to accept death as noble or required. The BSD character carries that same fierce refusal, expressed as a healing ability with the darkest possible catch.

The Hidden Layer

The Literary Genealogy BSD Uses as Combat Logic

BSD doesn’t just name characters after real authors. It encodes the actual historical relationships between those authors into the mechanics of the show. Literary influence becomes combat logic. Who inspired whom determines what can hurt whom.

Lovecraft → Yumeno → Q cannot curse Lovecraft

The real Yumeno Kyūsaku was deeply inspired by H.P. Lovecraft. In BSD, Q’s curse — which works by driving human minds mad — has no effect on Lovecraft because he is not human enough for human madness to latch onto. The real literary inspiration becomes the combat immunity.

Poe → Ranpo → Poe becomes Ranpo’s rival

The real Ranpo Edogawa named himself after Edgar Allan Poe — “Edogawa Ranpo” is a Japanese phonetic rendering of “Edgar Allan Poe.” BSD makes the American Poe a Guild operative who faces the Japanese detective directly. The student meets the inspiration as an adversary — and they end up becoming genuinely fond of each other.

Real Dazai admired real Nakahara

Documented in real literary history: Dazai Osamu admired Nakahara Chuuya’s poetry. BSD inverted this completely — making the admiration into friction, the connection into mutual contempt, and the one-directional influence into a partnership of absolute dependency. The power dynamic was reversed entirely.

Gogol → Dostoevsky → Allies in BSD

The real Dostoevsky credited Gogol as a foundational influence — “We all came out from under Gogol’s overcoat.” In BSD, Gogol and Fyodor are allied operatives in the Decay of the Angel. The disciple and the master, placed on the same side, with Gogol’s chaotic dark comedy playing against Fyodor’s absolute stillness.

“Pull one thread — why is Dazai’s power called No Longer Human? Who was the real Akutagawa? Why does Fitzgerald’s ability involve money? — and suddenly you’re reading about early 20th century literature and you have no idea how you got there. That’s the trick.”