Casimir Dukahz: Difference between revisions

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(For a free copy of '''The Asbestos Diary''' in PDF format, send your request to: '''willrobinson1965@fastmail.us''')
(For a free copy of '''The Asbestos Diary''' in PDF format, send your request to: '''willrobinson@tutanota.com''')




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His other published novels are ''Vice Versa'' (New York: [[Coltsfoot Press]], 1976), ''It's a Boy'' (Amsterdam: [[Coltsfoot Press]], 1984), ''Growing Old Disgracefully'' (Amsterdam: [[Acolyte Press]], 1986) and the posthumously published ''Shakespeare's Boy'' (Amsterdam: [[Acolyte Press]], 1991).  
His other published novels are ''Vice Versa'' (New York: [[Coltsfoot Press]], 1976), ''It's a Boy'' (Amsterdam: [[Coltsfoot Press]], 1984), ''Growing Old Disgracefully'' (Amsterdam: [[Acolyte Press]], 1986) and the posthumously published ''Shakespeare's Boy'' (Amsterdam: [[Acolyte Press]], 1991).  


[[Category:Author|Dukahz, Casimir]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dukahz, Casimir}}
[[Category:People|Dukahz, Casimir]]
[[Category:Authors]]
[[Category:1909 births|Dukahz, Casimir]]
[[Category:American literature]]
[[Category:20th-century boylovers‎]]
[[Category:1909 births]]

Latest revision as of 18:03, 21 January 2019

Casimir Dukahz (pseudonym of Brian O. Drexel, b. July 07, 1909 d. June 28, 1988) was the author of some highly-acclaimed BoyLove novels.


With his first novel The Asbestos Diary (New York: Oliver Layton Press, 1966), written in a humorous style full of wildly inventive wordplay, Dukahz evoked "in a fashion appropriately episodic both the bittersweet transience of boyhood and all the adolescent silliness and surprise encountered by a man constantly available for the entertainment of boys." [1] The Asbestos Diary created a sensation in its era and it has been argued that it was partly responsible for the rift between boylovers and radical feminists.


(For a free copy of The Asbestos Diary in PDF format, send your request to: willrobinson@tutanota.com)


The pen-name "Dukahz" may be a facetious reference to the prose poet Isidore Ducasse (1846-1870), the "comte de Lautréamont, (Count of Lautréamont)" who, in his six Chants de Maldoror,

celebrates the unbridled predatory misdeeds of a prowler monster whose shape is as indefinite as his age. ‘Peindre les délices de la cruauté’ is the avowed intention, and the reader is engulfed in a flux of nightmarish scenarios that unfurls with a strangely rhythmic insistence. Gothic paraphernalia and a grotesque menagerie of animal metamorphoses underpin a vision of man once innocent but now transmogrified into a wild beast. Male adolescents are the preferred prey, charmed, abducted, and destroyed in an atmosphere of psychopathic mayhem that smacks of the homosexual, but equally subverts any such inference.

- "comte de Lautréamont." The New Oxford Companion to Literature in French. Oxford : University Press, 1995, 2005. Answers.com 10 Jun. 2010.
http://www.answers.com/topic/comte-de-lautr-amont-3


Likewise, Dukahz's first name, "Casimir" may be a whimsical reference to the famous Polish-American general and hero of the American Revolution, Casimir Pulaski, who was a member of Polish nobility, a Count, just as Ducasse was the so-called "Count of Lautréamont."


His other published novels are Vice Versa (New York: Coltsfoot Press, 1976), It's a Boy (Amsterdam: Coltsfoot Press, 1984), Growing Old Disgracefully (Amsterdam: Acolyte Press, 1986) and the posthumously published Shakespeare's Boy (Amsterdam: Acolyte Press, 1991).