Tales of the Jazz Age (1922) is a collection of 11 short stories by F. Scott Fitzgerald. The story is divided into three separate parts, according to the subjects: My Last Flappers (The Jelly-Bean, The Camel's Back, May Day, and Porcelain and Pink), Fantasies Flappers (The Jelly-Bean, The Camel's Back, May Day, and Porcelain and Pink), Fantasies (The Diamond as Big as the Ritz and The Curious Case of Benjamin Button), and Unclassified Masterpieces Big as the Ritz and The Curious Case of Benjamin Button), and Mysterious Masterpieces (The Lees of Happiness, Mr. Icky, and Jemina the Mountain Girl), as well as the novelette May Day and the novella The Diamond as Big as the Ritz.
Scott Key Fitzgerald was a popular American author known for his novels and short stories; his works have been described as evocative of the Jazz Era; he coined the term.He was born in the 1890s and came of age during World War I. Scott was one of the greatest twentieth-century writers, a novelist, short-story writer, and essayist. In his lifetime, he had published over 164 short stories, four novels, and four story collections. His work has been translated into many languages, and he mostly writes stories with the theme of youth, love, despair, age, etc.