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It's about three disfuctional siblings and their parents' desire for them to come back to the midwest for one last Christmas reunion.
There are a lot of subplots, and one of them involves a mysterious drug company, and it's prozac like drug, Correctal, that one of the characters, Gary, invests in.
Gary does research on the web, and the author reproduces the phoney web pages within the text of the novel. It's very funny and effective, because Franzen skewers the "corporate-speak" found on the websites.
At another point, Franzen reproduces an email exchange (headings and all) between two of the other siblings, Chip and Denise, as well as parts of a website of a fraudulent investment scheme that Chip is composing in Lithuania.
Is that what you had in mind? You can use real facts, but make up the name and format of the website.
One last example -- from film, rather than fiction. In the movie, Broken Glass, about the New Republic journalist, Stephen Glass, who faked his sources, in part using fake websites, the movie shows the fake websites. Perhaps the book on which the film was based also shows websites within the text.
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