Tales of the Jazz Age

Tales of the Jazz Age

By F. Scott Fitzgerald

Pages

227

Rating

3.89

Year

1922

FictionClassicsAmerican20Th CenturyLiteratureShort Stories

Description

Stories of “the lost generation,” these Jazz Age tales vividly preserve Fitzgerald’s signature blend of enchantment and disillusionment. Including, “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button,” “Head and Shoulders,” “The Cut-Glass Bowl,” “The Four Fists,” “May Day,” and others, this gorgeous volume gathers all of Fitzgerald's most popular stories.

“The Curious Case of Benjamin Button” sees a baby born in 1860 begin life as an old man and then age backwards. F. Scott Fitzgerald hinted at this kind of inversion when he called his era “a generation grown up to find all Gods dead, all wars fought, all faiths in man shaken”. Perhaps nowhere in American fiction has this “lost generation” been more vividly preserved than in Fitzgerald's short fiction. Spanning the early twentieth-century American landscape, this collection captures, with Fitzgerald's signature blend of enchantment and disillusionment, America during the Jazz Age.

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