Seiko Tanabe was a Japanese author. She graduated from the Department of Japanese Literature of Shōin Joshi Senmon Gakkō. Author of numerous novels, she won the Akutagawa Prize, Yomiuri Prize, and Asahi Prize, and received the Order of Culture for her contributions to literature. The honorific nicknamed the L. M. Montgomery of Japan after her death in 2019.
Seitumer Emin was a Crimean Tatar writer and poet. A partisan during World War II, he became an active member of the Crimean Tatar civil rights movement in exile.
Seitzhan Omarov was a Kazakh writer. He is the author of numerous short stories, sketches, and fairy tales. His work was published in 20 collections of short stories. Omarov was an editor of "Zhazushy" publishing company. The high school number 3 in Atbasar, Kazakhstan, is named after Omarov. A museum of the writer can also be found there.
Sejfulla Malëshova was an Albanian politician, writer and translator. He was an early member of the Communist leadership in post-World War II Albania and served as the Ministry of Culture and Propaganda.
Seka Gadiyev (Ossetian: Гæдиаты Секъа) (1855/57 - August 3, 1915) was an Ossetian writer and poet, who is considered a classic of Ossetian literature and the founder of Ossetian classical prose.
Sekhar Bandyopadhyay is an Indian historian and a Fellow of the Royal Society Te Apārangi. Bandyopadhyay is known for his research on the Dalit caste of Bengal.
Cary Selden Rodman was a prolific American writer of poetry, plays and prose, political commentary, art criticism, Latin American and Caribbean history, biography and travel writing—publishing a book almost every year of his adult life, he also co-edited Common Sense magazine.
Seleucus of Seleucia was a Hellenistic astronomer and philosopher. Coming from Seleucia on the Tigris, Mesopotamia, the capital of the Seleucid Empire, or, alternatively, Seleukia on the Erythraean Sea, he is best known as a proponent of heliocentrism and for his theory of the causes of tides.
Selfixhe Ciu was an Albanian writer and the first Albanian woman writer to ever publish literature in Albania. On 28 November 1935, when she was 17, Selfixhe Ciu published under the plume name Kolombja, a poem on the Populli newspaper. She then is part of the Albanian writers of the 1930s period. She was also one of the very first Albanian Feminists.