Vice Versa; or, A Lesson to Fathers by F. Anstey

(3 User reviews)   518
By Casey Marino Posted on Mar 30, 2026
In Category - Satire
Anstey, F., 1856-1934 Anstey, F., 1856-1934
English
Hey, have you ever wished you could swap places with your dad for a day? Not just to get out of school, but to actually be him? That's the wild situation Paul Bultitude finds himself in. One minute, he's a grumpy, middle-aged businessman who thinks his son has it easy. The next, thanks to a magical stone from India, he wakes up in his teenage son Dick's body, and Dick is now living his life! Suddenly, Paul has to go back to school, face bullies, and do algebra, while his son is running his business and ordering him around. It's a hilarious and surprisingly sharp look at how we see each other across generations. Think 'Freaky Friday' but in Victorian England, with way more cravats and social awkwardness. It's a total delight.
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Imagine a stuffy, self-important Victorian father named Paul Bultitude. He's constantly annoyed by what he sees as his son Dick's carefree, privileged life. When Dick brings home a mysterious 'Garuda Stone' from India, said to grant a single wish, Paul jokingly wishes he could trade places with his son to teach him a lesson. The stone takes him very, very literally.

The Story

Paul wakes up the next morning in his son's body, and his son's consciousness is now in his. The rules are simple but brutal: they're stuck like this until someone else willingly makes the same wish using the stone. Paul is forced to return to the nightmare of boarding school—dealing with cruel masters, confusing lessons, and teenage politics. Meanwhile, Dick, enjoying his new adult authority and wealth, is in no hurry to switch back. The story follows Paul's desperate and often humiliating attempts to navigate a world he's forgotten, all while trying to get his old life back from his gleeful son.

Why You Should Read It

What makes this book so fun isn't just the magical mix-up. It's the brilliant way Anstey uses it to poke fun at everyone. Paul is a fantastic character—watching this pompous man be utterly humbled by Latin homework and dormitory food is comedy gold. But it's not just one-sided. We also see the genuine pressures and fears of a Victorian schoolboy through the eyes of a terrified adult. The book asks a simple but great question: do we ever really understand what someone else's life is like? It's less about teaching a lesson and more about gaining perspective, wrapped up in a genuinely funny adventure.

Final Verdict

This is a perfect pick for anyone who loves classic, clever humor. If you enjoy authors like P.G. Wodehouse or the premise of movies like 'Big' or 'Freaky Friday', you'll feel right at home. It's for readers who want a classic that doesn't take itself too seriously—a sharp, witty, and surprisingly heartfelt farce about fathers, sons, and the grass always being greener. A real hidden gem of Victorian comedy.



ℹ️ License Information

This title is part of the public domain archive. You can copy, modify, and distribute it freely.

Matthew Brown
1 year ago

A bit long but worth it.

Sandra Taylor
1 year ago

From the very first page, it challenges the reader's perspective in an intellectual way. I learned so much from this.

Dorothy Sanchez
1 year ago

Good quality content.

5
5 out of 5 (3 User reviews )

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