The Shadow-Eater
Publisher:
Year: 1915
Pages: 59
Chameleon, Being A Book Of My Selves
Publisher:
Year: 1922
Pages:
James Gibbons Huneker
Publisher:
Year: 1925
Pages: 62
Mirrors of New York
Publisher:
Year: 1925
Pages: 221
Forty Immortals
Publisher:
Year: 1926
Pages: 371
The Shadow-Eater
Publisher: American Library Service
Year: 1927
Pages: 61
Anathema! Litanies of Negation
Publisher:
Year: 1928
Pages:
The Superman In America
Publisher:
Year: 1929
Pages: 30
Mencken and Shaw
Publisher:
Year: 1930
Pages: 144
The Love Letters Of A Living Poet
Publisher:
Year: 1931
Pages: 243
Spinoza, Liberator of God and Man
Publisher:
Year: 1932
Pages:
When Huck Finn Went Highbrow
Publisher:
Year: 1934
Pages:
The Muse Of Lies
Publisher:
Year: 1936
Pages: 149
The Works of Benjamin DeCasseres
Publisher: Blackstone Press
Year: 1939
Pages:
The Works of Benjamin DeCasseres
Publisher: Gordon Press
Year: 1975
Pages:
Anathema! Litanies of Negation
Publisher: Underworld Amusements
Year: 2013
Pages: 66
IMP: The Poetry of Benjamin DeCasseres
Publisher: Underworld Amusements
Year: 2013
Pages: 194
Fantasia Impromptu & FINIS
Publisher: Underworld Amusements
Year: 2016
Pages: 246
New York is Hell: Thinking and Drinking in the Beautiful Beast
Publisher: Underworld Amusements
Year: 2016
Pages: 360
Fulminations: Caustic, Capricious & Cosmic
Publisher: Underworld Amusements
Year: 2019
Pages: 358
Spinoza: Liberator of God and Man & Against the Rabbis
Publisher: Underworld Amusements
Year: 2020
Pages: 192
*The DeCasseres Books
In 1936 Benjamin DeCasseres took it upon himself to try to publish as much of his own work as he could. He paid for the printing himself through “Blackstone Publishers.” and later collected them into the above mentioned “The Works of Benjamin DeCasseres”. You can find out more information on its own page.
‘Black Suns’ (Part Two) was never published, but I don’t know why. The end of his publishing his own work seemed to coincide with the outbreak of World War Two in Europe. He didn’t publish anything else until ‘Finis’ in 1945. Incidentally, I suspect his wife may have possibly have been responsible for the publication, as the intro to ‘Finis’ is written as if the author had already passed away.