Yeah, no offense Zach, but this is a thread that has over 600 posts and there is a very strict rule. Answer the question, and get the right to ask a question. There are probably other threads that the question can be asked and will give a lively discussion.
Okay, I got one: Bukowski was one of three poets whose work was published in Sisyphus Leaves. Who were the other two?
Sisyphus Leaves was a little small press magazine thing that appeared in the early nineties (and then quickly disappeared forever).
Ah, I see that I already broke a rule (I asked without answering first). So here's a question with an answer.
Q: What's Steve Richmond's middle name?
A: Andrew
Yeah, that dilettante Goodwin published himself in that little magazine (along with Bukowski and Richmond). That was before he quit the whole small press scene and started writing about himself in the third person.
c'mon guys, rack your brains. This poem was published as a broadside in 1975 -minus the drawing, I think, but I'm not sure because I've never seen the broadside- and in a few other places, but it first appeared in 1974 in... where?
cirerita,
I must say. you do find the magazines that are obscure. I take it that the place that it was published in 1974 is in a mag that mjp and fogel did not know about? It is probably one that Martin did not know about either....
John Martin not only saw this poem, he published it many times. I was referring to the earliest magazine appearance. I believe that Old Marble Press was a ficticious press (Published by John Martin?). Also, this poem appeared in "Africa, Paris, Greece", "Play The Piano...." and "Run With The Hunted".
it was published in an Australian mag in 1975 and in several other mags later on, but it was first published in a pretty famous paper. that's some hint, huh?
To continue an earlier thread. Please name all of the press names that published Bukowski, but were in reality John Martin. Not counting Black Sparrow.
What about The Paget Press? They published the buk/Purdy letters and the book looks just like a BS book, so I got the idea that it maybe was a BS operation...
Paget Press does indeed look like BSP, but that may be because they were bound by Earle Grey bookbinders. I have also seen a high end bookseller, who would release his yearly catalog that was bound by them. It was beatiful. As mysterious as Paget Press was, I don;t think that they were a BSP joint...
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