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Story about a scientist dad with the ability to edit published books



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7















The following question was just sent out to a private mailing list I'm on:




OK, this is driving me nuts. About 20 years ago I remember reading a scifi novel where the kids got in an argument with their father, a scientist of some type. Dad had access to some technology that could edit the words in an already published book and he used it to make it looks like the kids were wrong by changing the words in the book they were referencing. Basically, literally rewrite history. Does anybody know the title?











share|improve this question




















  • 11





    My god...they predicted Wikipedia?

    – Jeff
    Sep 1 '11 at 15:09











  • Makes me think of "The kugelmass episode", but that had a man entering stories (and, at one point, bringing a character out), not realizing that it was changing all copies of the story.

    – K-H-W
    Sep 1 '11 at 21:41


















7















The following question was just sent out to a private mailing list I'm on:




OK, this is driving me nuts. About 20 years ago I remember reading a scifi novel where the kids got in an argument with their father, a scientist of some type. Dad had access to some technology that could edit the words in an already published book and he used it to make it looks like the kids were wrong by changing the words in the book they were referencing. Basically, literally rewrite history. Does anybody know the title?











share|improve this question




















  • 11





    My god...they predicted Wikipedia?

    – Jeff
    Sep 1 '11 at 15:09











  • Makes me think of "The kugelmass episode", but that had a man entering stories (and, at one point, bringing a character out), not realizing that it was changing all copies of the story.

    – K-H-W
    Sep 1 '11 at 21:41














7












7








7


1






The following question was just sent out to a private mailing list I'm on:




OK, this is driving me nuts. About 20 years ago I remember reading a scifi novel where the kids got in an argument with their father, a scientist of some type. Dad had access to some technology that could edit the words in an already published book and he used it to make it looks like the kids were wrong by changing the words in the book they were referencing. Basically, literally rewrite history. Does anybody know the title?











share|improve this question
















The following question was just sent out to a private mailing list I'm on:




OK, this is driving me nuts. About 20 years ago I remember reading a scifi novel where the kids got in an argument with their father, a scientist of some type. Dad had access to some technology that could edit the words in an already published book and he used it to make it looks like the kids were wrong by changing the words in the book they were referencing. Basically, literally rewrite history. Does anybody know the title?








story-identification






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 4 mins ago









Stormblessed

2,4871939




2,4871939










asked Sep 1 '11 at 5:56









David ZDavid Z

842717




842717








  • 11





    My god...they predicted Wikipedia?

    – Jeff
    Sep 1 '11 at 15:09











  • Makes me think of "The kugelmass episode", but that had a man entering stories (and, at one point, bringing a character out), not realizing that it was changing all copies of the story.

    – K-H-W
    Sep 1 '11 at 21:41














  • 11





    My god...they predicted Wikipedia?

    – Jeff
    Sep 1 '11 at 15:09











  • Makes me think of "The kugelmass episode", but that had a man entering stories (and, at one point, bringing a character out), not realizing that it was changing all copies of the story.

    – K-H-W
    Sep 1 '11 at 21:41








11




11





My god...they predicted Wikipedia?

– Jeff
Sep 1 '11 at 15:09





My god...they predicted Wikipedia?

– Jeff
Sep 1 '11 at 15:09













Makes me think of "The kugelmass episode", but that had a man entering stories (and, at one point, bringing a character out), not realizing that it was changing all copies of the story.

– K-H-W
Sep 1 '11 at 21:41





Makes me think of "The kugelmass episode", but that had a man entering stories (and, at one point, bringing a character out), not realizing that it was changing all copies of the story.

– K-H-W
Sep 1 '11 at 21:41










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















3














Two books spring to mind (but I'm not sure either is correct). First, Jasper Fforde's Thursday Next series has as part of its plot the characters in a book can change how the story goes at times. Second, there was an old superman book, Eliot S Maggin's T*he Last Son of Krypton*, where Lex Luthor argues with a teacher about a historical fact. When the teacher references the book, Lex had made it appear as if the words supported his version.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    The Eyre Affair was published in 2001, so probably not. The book rewriting incident would have to be a minor one, a recollection from Thursday Next's past (I don't remember such an incident, Thursday's father would have the ability to do that but it doesn't strike me as in-character).

    – user56
    Sep 1 '11 at 20:21






  • 1





    I immediately though of Fforde too when reading the question; and even if it can't be that one, it's definitely worth reading.

    – Joubarc
    Oct 13 '11 at 12:19



















-3














Sounds very much like "1984", except for the part about kids.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    Since the part about "the kids" and their Dad, is a major part of the post, it's obviously not 1984.

    – John C
    Sep 1 '11 at 16:00












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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









3














Two books spring to mind (but I'm not sure either is correct). First, Jasper Fforde's Thursday Next series has as part of its plot the characters in a book can change how the story goes at times. Second, there was an old superman book, Eliot S Maggin's T*he Last Son of Krypton*, where Lex Luthor argues with a teacher about a historical fact. When the teacher references the book, Lex had made it appear as if the words supported his version.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    The Eyre Affair was published in 2001, so probably not. The book rewriting incident would have to be a minor one, a recollection from Thursday Next's past (I don't remember such an incident, Thursday's father would have the ability to do that but it doesn't strike me as in-character).

    – user56
    Sep 1 '11 at 20:21






  • 1





    I immediately though of Fforde too when reading the question; and even if it can't be that one, it's definitely worth reading.

    – Joubarc
    Oct 13 '11 at 12:19
















3














Two books spring to mind (but I'm not sure either is correct). First, Jasper Fforde's Thursday Next series has as part of its plot the characters in a book can change how the story goes at times. Second, there was an old superman book, Eliot S Maggin's T*he Last Son of Krypton*, where Lex Luthor argues with a teacher about a historical fact. When the teacher references the book, Lex had made it appear as if the words supported his version.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    The Eyre Affair was published in 2001, so probably not. The book rewriting incident would have to be a minor one, a recollection from Thursday Next's past (I don't remember such an incident, Thursday's father would have the ability to do that but it doesn't strike me as in-character).

    – user56
    Sep 1 '11 at 20:21






  • 1





    I immediately though of Fforde too when reading the question; and even if it can't be that one, it's definitely worth reading.

    – Joubarc
    Oct 13 '11 at 12:19














3












3








3







Two books spring to mind (but I'm not sure either is correct). First, Jasper Fforde's Thursday Next series has as part of its plot the characters in a book can change how the story goes at times. Second, there was an old superman book, Eliot S Maggin's T*he Last Son of Krypton*, where Lex Luthor argues with a teacher about a historical fact. When the teacher references the book, Lex had made it appear as if the words supported his version.






share|improve this answer













Two books spring to mind (but I'm not sure either is correct). First, Jasper Fforde's Thursday Next series has as part of its plot the characters in a book can change how the story goes at times. Second, there was an old superman book, Eliot S Maggin's T*he Last Son of Krypton*, where Lex Luthor argues with a teacher about a historical fact. When the teacher references the book, Lex had made it appear as if the words supported his version.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Sep 1 '11 at 15:13









Mark S.Mark S.

63255




63255








  • 1





    The Eyre Affair was published in 2001, so probably not. The book rewriting incident would have to be a minor one, a recollection from Thursday Next's past (I don't remember such an incident, Thursday's father would have the ability to do that but it doesn't strike me as in-character).

    – user56
    Sep 1 '11 at 20:21






  • 1





    I immediately though of Fforde too when reading the question; and even if it can't be that one, it's definitely worth reading.

    – Joubarc
    Oct 13 '11 at 12:19














  • 1





    The Eyre Affair was published in 2001, so probably not. The book rewriting incident would have to be a minor one, a recollection from Thursday Next's past (I don't remember such an incident, Thursday's father would have the ability to do that but it doesn't strike me as in-character).

    – user56
    Sep 1 '11 at 20:21






  • 1





    I immediately though of Fforde too when reading the question; and even if it can't be that one, it's definitely worth reading.

    – Joubarc
    Oct 13 '11 at 12:19








1




1





The Eyre Affair was published in 2001, so probably not. The book rewriting incident would have to be a minor one, a recollection from Thursday Next's past (I don't remember such an incident, Thursday's father would have the ability to do that but it doesn't strike me as in-character).

– user56
Sep 1 '11 at 20:21





The Eyre Affair was published in 2001, so probably not. The book rewriting incident would have to be a minor one, a recollection from Thursday Next's past (I don't remember such an incident, Thursday's father would have the ability to do that but it doesn't strike me as in-character).

– user56
Sep 1 '11 at 20:21




1




1





I immediately though of Fforde too when reading the question; and even if it can't be that one, it's definitely worth reading.

– Joubarc
Oct 13 '11 at 12:19





I immediately though of Fforde too when reading the question; and even if it can't be that one, it's definitely worth reading.

– Joubarc
Oct 13 '11 at 12:19













-3














Sounds very much like "1984", except for the part about kids.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    Since the part about "the kids" and their Dad, is a major part of the post, it's obviously not 1984.

    – John C
    Sep 1 '11 at 16:00
















-3














Sounds very much like "1984", except for the part about kids.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    Since the part about "the kids" and their Dad, is a major part of the post, it's obviously not 1984.

    – John C
    Sep 1 '11 at 16:00














-3












-3








-3







Sounds very much like "1984", except for the part about kids.






share|improve this answer













Sounds very much like "1984", except for the part about kids.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Sep 1 '11 at 14:55









DimaDima

12.9k34366




12.9k34366








  • 1





    Since the part about "the kids" and their Dad, is a major part of the post, it's obviously not 1984.

    – John C
    Sep 1 '11 at 16:00














  • 1





    Since the part about "the kids" and their Dad, is a major part of the post, it's obviously not 1984.

    – John C
    Sep 1 '11 at 16:00








1




1





Since the part about "the kids" and their Dad, is a major part of the post, it's obviously not 1984.

– John C
Sep 1 '11 at 16:00





Since the part about "the kids" and their Dad, is a major part of the post, it's obviously not 1984.

– John C
Sep 1 '11 at 16:00


















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