. "Hirotada Ototake"@en . . . . "225"^^ . . . "Hirotada Ototake(\u4E59\u6B66 \u6D0B\u5321Ototake Hirotada) (born April 6, 1976) is a Japanese sports writer from Tokyo, Japan. Born without arms and legs due to a genetic disorder called tetra-amelia syndrome, he is most notable for his 1998 memoir No One's Perfect (\u4E94\u4F53\u4E0D\u6E80\u8DB3 Gotai fumanzoku) ISBN 4770027648, which was a bestseller in Japan. To date, it has sold 4.5 million copies in Japan, making it the second-highest selling book there in nearly 50 years.[citation needed] This template name redirects to {{[[Template:|]]\u2026}} which may be edited using [[ edit]]. See also 1. \n* \n* 2. \n* Wikipedia:Redirects 3. \n* Wikipedia:Template messages/Redirect pages This is a redirect from a page that has been moved/renamed. This page was kept as a redirect to avoid breaking links that may have been made, both internally and externally, to the old article title. This template automatically tags any redirect that results from a page move. For more information, see the Category:Redirects from moves linked on the documentation page. Since the publication of No One's Perfect, Ototake became a successful sports journalist and, as of 2007, a primary school teacher in Suginami Ward, Tokyo."@en . . . . "Hirotada Ototake"@en . . . "Hirotada Ototake(\u4E59\u6B66 \u6D0B\u5321Ototake Hirotada) (born April 6, 1976) is a Japanese sports writer from Tokyo, Japan. Born without arms and legs due to a genetic disorder called tetra-amelia syndrome, he is most notable for his 1998 memoir No One's Perfect (\u4E94\u4F53\u4E0D\u6E80\u8DB3 Gotai fumanzoku) ISBN 4770027648, which was a bestseller in Japan. To date, it has sold 4.5 million copies in Japan, making it the second-highest selling book there in nearly 50 years.[citation needed] This template name redirects to {{[[Template:|]]\u2026}} which may be edited using [[ edit]]. See also"@en . "1976-04-06"^^ . . "Hirotada Ototake"@en . . . .