J.P. Martin
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John Percival Martin (187924 March 1966) was an English author best known for his ''Uncle'' series of children's stories.


Life

Martin was the son of John Martin, a Wesleyan Methodist minister, and his wife Ellen Fowler, daughter of the Rev. Philip Fowler, another Wesleyan, and his wife Mary. Philip Fowler was the brother of Mary Fowler, wife of the Pacific missionary James Calvert. John Percival, known in the family as Percy, was born in Scarborough in the
North Riding of Yorkshire The North Riding of Yorkshire is a subdivision of Yorkshire, England, alongside York, the East Riding and West Riding. The riding's highest point is at Mickle Fell with 2,585 ft (788 metres). From the Restoration it was used as ...
in the summer of 1879, the fifth of seven children of whom one died before he was born. His younger sister Dora (Theodora Fowler Martin, 1882–1961) is also known as a writer, under the name Dora Fowler Martin. While his two elder brothers were sent to Kingswood School, founded by
John Wesley John Wesley (; 2 March 1791) was an English people, English cleric, Christian theology, theologian, and Evangelism, evangelist who was a leader of a Christian revival, revival movement within the Church of England known as Methodism. The soci ...
, John was not. His elder sister Mary Calvert (May) went to Trinity Hall School, Southport, and then university. His parents feeling he was not suited to
boarding school A boarding school is a school where pupils live within premises while being given formal instruction. The word "boarding" is used in the sense of "room and board", i.e. lodging and meals. As they have existed for many centuries, and now exten ...
, he attended local day schools in the northern cities and towns where his father ministered to Methodist circuits. In 1898, the Martin family was based in
Dewsbury Dewsbury is a minster and market town in the Metropolitan Borough of Kirklees in West Yorkshire, England. It lies on the River Calder and on an arm of the Calder and Hebble Navigation waterway. It is to the west of Wakefield, east of Hudder ...
, and John was working in the accounts department of the local steel works. He was asked to join the Wesleyan Leeds mission, which for some years had been reconstructed with the ministry of Samuel Chadwick. Shortly he became a candidate for the ministry, and was given a district missionary responsibility in Halifax and
Bradford Bradford is a city and the administrative centre of the City of Bradford district in West Yorkshire, England. The city is in the Pennines' eastern foothills on the banks of the Bradford Beck. Bradford had a population of 349,561 at the 2011 ...
. Martin became a Methodist minister in 1903, and then served as a missionary in South Africa: he chose reconstruction work after the
Second Anglo-Boer War The Second Boer War ( af, Tweede Vryheidsoorlog, , 11 October 189931 May 1902), also known as the Boer War, the Anglo–Boer War, or the South African War, was a conflict fought between the British Empire and the two Boer Republics (the South ...
, over his father's wish that he should go to
Fiji Fiji ( , ,; fj, Viti, ; Fiji Hindi: फ़िजी, ''Fijī''), officially the Republic of Fiji, is an island country in Melanesia, part of Oceania in the South Pacific Ocean. It lies about north-northeast of New Zealand. Fiji consists ...
. His uncle James Calvert Fowler had been posted to
Kimberley, Northern Cape Kimberley is the capital and largest city of the Northern Cape province of South Africa. It is located approximately 110 km east of the confluence of the Vaal and Orange Rivers. The city has considerable historical significance due to it ...
and the diamond mines. Percy had met his future wife Nancy at the Leeds Mission, and before he left came to understanding that they would marry. In 1904 he was placed first in Ventersdorp. From there he was exchanged to
Potchefstroom Potchefstroom (, colloquially known as Potch) is an academic city in the North West Province of South Africa. It hosts the Potchefstroom Campus of the North-West University. Potchefstroom is on the Mooi Rivier (Afrikaans for "pretty river" ...
, and was then sent across the Transvaal to Pilgrim's Rest and Sabie, a gold-mining area, living first at Lydenburg since the Pilgrim's Rest church had been destroyed in the war. Now married, John and Nancy Martin moved to Roodepoort in 1907. They were transferred to the large Wesleyan church at
Mafeking Mafikeng, officially known as Mahikeng and previously Mafeking (, ), is the capital city of the North West province of South Africa. Close to South Africa's border with Botswana, Mafikeng is northeast of Cape Town and west of Johannesburg. In ...
in 1910. Returning with his family to England in 1913, Martin became a Wesleyan chaplain at Wycliffe College, Gloucestershire. He was an army chaplain in
Palestine __NOTOC__ Palestine may refer to: * State of Palestine, a state in Western Asia * Palestine (region), a geographic region in Western Asia * Palestinian territories, territories occupied by Israel since 1967, namely the West Bank (including East ...
during the World War I. After World War II he lived in the village of
Timberscombe Timberscombe is a village and civil parish on the River Avill south-west of Dunster, and south of Minehead within the Exmoor National Park in Somerset, England. The parish includes the hamlet of Bickham. History The parish was part of the hu ...
in Somerset, where he died in March 1966.


The ''Uncle'' series

The ''Uncle'' books are: * '' Uncle'' (1964) * '' Uncle Cleans Up'' (1965) * ''
Uncle and His Detective ''Uncle and his Detective'' (1966) is a children's story by J. P. Martin, as part of his ''Uncle'' series of books. Plot summary The story begins with the arrival not of a detective, but of disaster: Badfort is for sale, but when Uncle decides ...
'' (1966) * ''
Uncle and the Treacle Trouble ''Uncle and the Treacle Trouble'' (1967) is a children's novel written by J. P. Martin, the fourth of his ''Uncle (book series), Uncle'' series of six books. It was illustrated, like the others in the series, by Quentin Blake. Plot summary In thi ...
'' (1967) * ''
Uncle and Claudius the Camel ''Uncle and Claudius the Camel'' (1969) is a children's novel written by J. P. Martin, the fifth of his ''Uncle'' book series of six books. It was illustrated, like the others in the series, by Quentin Blake Sir Quentin Saxby Blake, (born ...
'' (1970) * ''
Uncle and the Battle for Badgertown ''Uncle and the Battle for Badgertown'' (1973) is a children's novel written by J. P. Martin, the last of his ''Uncle'' series of six books. It was illustrated, like the others in the series, by Quentin Blake Sir Quentin Saxby Blake, (born ...
'' (1973) The Uncle of the six books in the series is a very rich elephant living in a very large house called Homeward. He is plagued by a group of enemies concerned with puncturing his pretensions, and driving home the charge, true enough, that he once stole a bicycle.
Homeward is hard to describe, but try to think of about a hundred skyscrapers all joined together and surrounded by a moat with a drawbridge over it, and you'll get some idea. The towers are of many colours, and there are bathing pools and gardens amongst them, also switchback railways running from tower to tower, and water-chutes from top to bottom.
Uncle has friends and supporters, including the Old Monkey, the One-Armed Badger, the cat Goodman, Noddy Ninety, Cloutman, the King of the Badgers, and Butterskin Mute. He is the sworn enemy of the inhabitants of Badfort, an enormous derelict fortress that blights the landscape in front of Homeward. Living in there are the Badfort gang, nominally headed by the Hateman family, Beaver, Nailrod Snr, Nailrod Jnr, Filljug, and Sigismund, with the support of Flabskin, Oily Joe, the dwarvish, cowardly, skewer-throwing Isidore Hitmouse, the scheming ghost Hootman, and Jellytussle, an animated mound of bluish jelly.


Reception

Initial reviews of the series in the 1960s by Penelope Mortimer and
Geoffrey Moorhouse Geoffrey Moorhouse, Royal Geographical Society, FRGS, Royal Society of Literature, FRSL, Doctor of Letters, D.Litt. (29 November 1931 – 26 November 2009) was an English journalist and author. He was born Geoffrey Heald in Bolton and took his ste ...
were favorable. In 1977 John Rowe Townsend wrote in ''25 Years of British Children's Books'' "There are several Uncle books , all inconsequentially episodic and hilariously illustrated by Quentin Blake". The ''Oxford Companion to Children's Literature'' (1984) commented on its "wildest schoolboy-style inventions and implausibilities, narrated with dead-pan humour." '' The Economist'' noted in 2005 that the stories "which focus on the doings of the eponymous hero, an elephant and benevolent dictator, were first published in the 1960s, and still enjoy a cult following." Imogen Russell Williams wrote in 2007 "If there was ever a children's series generating fanatical, "cult" adoration, this is it."


Reprints

The first book was reprinted in paperback in 2000 by Red Fox: . See also . Hardcover reprints of the first two volumes were published by the New York Review of Books in 2007-8 ( and ). In March 2013, a
Kickstarter Kickstarter is an American public benefit corporation based in Brooklyn, New York, that maintains a global crowdfunding platform focused on creativity. The company's stated mission is to "help bring creative projects to life". As of July 2021, ...
campaign was announced to reprint all six Uncle books in an omnibus edition. The reprint had the support of — and contributions from — several authors and illustrators, including
Neil Gaiman Neil Richard MacKinnon GaimanBorn as Neil Richard Gaiman, with "MacKinnon" added on the occasion of his marriage to Amanda Palmer. ; ( Neil Richard Gaiman; born 10 November 1960) is an English author of short fiction, novels, comic books, gr ...
, Justin Pollard, Garth Nix, Martin Rowson,
Andy Riley Andy Riley (born 1970) is a British author, cartoonist, and Emmy-winning screenwriter for TV and film. Riley has written and drawn many best-selling cartoon books, including ''The Book of Bunny Suicides'' (2003) and its sequels, and ''Great Lie ...
, Kate Summerscale, and Richard Ingrams. The campaign was fully funded in a little over four hours. The book was published on 31 October 2013 under the title of ''The Complete Uncle'', .


Family

In 1906 Martin married Annie "Nancy" Mann (died 1944), daughter of Michael Urwin Mann, in Johannesburg. He later married as his second wife Jane Jenny Sowerbutts née Mann, in 1947. He had four children, two girls and two boys, from his first marriage. Martin's ''Uncle'' stories were first told to his children before he wrote them down for a wider audience. The eldest child was Helen Estella Martin (1907–1994), known as Stella Martin. She was to 1984 her father's official biographer, her work appearing in 2017 as Stella Martin Currey edited by James Martin Currey, under the title '' J.P. Martin: Father of Uncle: A Master in the Great English Nonsense Tradition 1879–1966''; and also editor of the three Uncle books that appeared after his death. Stella Martin worked from the early 1920s as a journalist on the ''Bristol Times and Mirror''. At the end of the decade the ''Time and Mirror'', owned by the Berry Group (at one point Allied Newspapers) was caught up in a circulation war with the ''Bristol Evening World'' (owned by national rivals the Rothermeres). It resulted in Stella being moved from writing aimed at a female audience, to being a "zoo correspondent". For a time she provided copy influenced by her father's juvenile fiction. In 1932 the ''Time and Mirror'' folded, and later that year Stella married
Ralph Nixon Currey Ralph Nixon Currey (14 December 1907 – 18 November 2001) was a South African born poet, who wrote in English. Life He was born in Mafeking, South Africa, the son of John Currey (1871–1959) and his wife Edith Vinnicombe (1881–1959). His fathe ...
, a friend of the family. In 1934 the couple encouraged J. P. Martin to write down the "Uncle" stories.


References


External links


Detailed Uncle bibliography
{{DEFAULTSORT:Martin, J.P. 1879 births 1966 deaths English children's writers Writers from Scarborough, North Yorkshire