Benjamin Button
F. Scott Fitzgerald is commonly thought of as one the 20th century's greatest writers and is best known for his reflections on the society of the 1920's; named the "Jazz Age" by Fitzgerald himself. But one of his short stories, published in Colliers magazine in 1922 was a purely fictional account of a remarkable man named Benjamin Button. In his The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, Fitzgerald examines a number of themes including a family's place in society, how individuals refuse to accept reality and live in a state of denial, and even a person's place within the family structure. But the theme that was presented repeatedly by Fitzgerald was the concept of age and how it affects a person's attitudes and relationships in the world.
Benjamin Button is remarkable in so much as he is born in 1860 as a 70-year-old man, and as time progresses forward, Benjamin ages backward. In others words, he was born a 70-year-old man, with the knowledge and attitudes of one, but twenty years later Benjamin was a 50-year-old man. This continues through the next seventy years with a number of interesting situations happening along the way. And as Benjamin ages backwards, his attitudes and relationships change in interesting ways. When Benjamin first comes...
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