![](http://static.neatorama.com/images/2013-03/first-word-processor-IBM.jpg)
In
1968, novelist Len Deighton's personal assistant had a problem. She had
to retype chapter drafts for his book in progress dozens of times over.
Thankfully, IBM had something that could help:
A few weeks later, Deighton stood outside his Georgian terrace home
and watched as workers removed a window so that a 200-pound unit could
be hoisted inside with a crane. The machine was IBM’s MTST (Magnetic
Tape Selectric Typewriter), sold in the European market as the MT72.
“Standing in the leafy square in which I lived, watching all
this activity, I had a moment of doubt,” the author, now 84,
told me in a recent email. “I was beginning to think that I
had chosen a rather unusual way to write books.”
Today, of course, many—surely most—fiction writers work
with computers, laptops, and word processors just like the rest of
us. Literary scholarship generally credits Mark Twain’s Life
on the Mississippi with being the first manuscript submitted to a
publisher in typewritten form. Would it be possible, I wondered when
I began my research into the literary history of word processing a
year and a half ago, to locate a corresponding first for the digital
age? The answer turns out to be the book Deighton published in 1970
with the aid of the MTST: a curiously apropos novel about World War
II, titled Bomber![](http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=neatorama-20&l=as2&o=1&a=1402790546)
Matthew Kirschenbaum of Slate has the story:
Here.
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