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John Martin (publisher)


John Martin (born 1930) is an American publisher who founded Black Sparrow Press. As a publisher, he is best known for his work with Charles Bukowski, John Fante and Paul Bowles. He is based in Santa Rosa, California.

Martin built a successful office supply business in Los Angeles in the 1960s. He had been a book collector since the age of 20, eventually amassing a collection of D. H. Lawrence first editions, which he sold to UC Santa Barbara for $50,000 to fund the founding of Black Sparrow Press.

Martin considered Bukowski “the new Walt Whitman” and founded Black Sparrow Press explicitly to publish Bukowski’s work.

At the time, Bukowski was mostly publishing small chapbooks in small editions. Martin’s office supply business gave him access to a printing press, and his first publication under the Black Sparrow imprint was a 1966 Bukowski broadside for the poem “True Story,” which was printed in an edition of 30.

In 1969, Martin offered Bukowski a $100 per month salary to quit his job and write full-time, which Bukowski accepted. In 1971, Martin suggested a novel would be easier to sell than a collection of poems; a month later, Bukowski submitted his first novel, Post Office.

Martin was frequently referenced as a character in Bukowski’s work, including appearing as the character John Barton in the author's final novel, Pulp. Los Angeles author and blogger Michael Phillipis has alleged Martin made substantial edits and changes to Bukowski's poetry that has been released posthumously. This controversy has received some media and blog attention.

In his career, Martin was known as a champion of underground or avant-garde literature. Under Martin’s watch, Black Sparrow went on to publish works by many prominent literary figures such as Robert Duncan, Denise Levertov, Robert Creeley, Diane Wakoski, David Bromige, Joyce Carol Oates, John Ashbery, Wanda Coleman, Charles Reznikoff, Kenneth Koch and Ed Sanders.


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