Charles Duits

He wrote for the Da Costa Encyclopédique from 1946; it was launched by Robert Lebel with Isabelle and Patrick Waldberg, and its anonymous contributors included leading surrealists, Georges Bataille and Jean Ferry.

[2][3] As a novelist, Duits, bears comparison with Gustave Flaubert and with fellow French fantasist Christia Sylf.

Ptah Hotep (1971) and Nefer (1978) together comprise a heroic fantasy take place in an Earth with two moons, one called Athenade and the other Thana.

Ptah Hotep is the story of the ascension of a young prince to the rank of the second man of the empire, the duke of Ham.

Nefer, which takes place several centuries later, tells of the adventures of a young Egyptian priest who falls in love with a sacred prostitute.