{"product_id":"faizi-the-buffet-car-at-the-end-of-the-world-9798232450212","title":"The Buffet Car at the End of the World","description":"In a world obsessed with the aesthetics of progress but paralyzed by the logistics of reality, the Bjorn-Express was supposed to be the ultimate solution. Marketed as a \"trans-continental hyper-luxury rail experience,\" it promised the elite of the world a journey through the pristine, snow-capped majesty of the Swiss Alps with a carbon footprint so small it was practically invisible. It was the crowning achievement of the Vane Dynasty and the \"green\" investment of the century. There was only one problem, which the marketing department cleverly rebranded as a feature: the train never actually left the siding in Berkshire. The Stationary Horizon follows the intersecting lives of three hundred \"passengers\" trapped within this high-fidelity hallucination. At the center of the storm is Barnaby Vane, a man whose soul has been eroded by a lifetime of corporate gaslighting. While his brother, the charismatic and morally flexible Senator Vane, preaches to the cabin about the \"Green Revolution\" and the \"Triumph of the Static Journey,\" Barnaby begins to notice the glitches in the matrix. He sees the pixelated edges of the Matterhorn; he realizes the \"Alpine breeze\" smells suspiciously like industrial-grade Febreze; and he discovers that the mountain goats seen through the windows are actually poorly disguised robotic vacuums. The narrative is a biting satire of the modern \"experience economy,\" where the perception of a thing has become more valuable than the thing itself. As the chapters progress, the Bjorn-Express becomes a microcosm of a society that has decided to stop moving forward, choosing instead to simulate the feeling of travel while parked behind a Tesco in Slough. The passengers-a collection of influencers, disgraced tech CEOs, and existentialist philosophers-slowly descend into a polite sort of madness, debating the vintage of biological wine while their luggage is slowly reclaimed by the damp English air. The tension reaches a breaking point in the climax, \"The Review.\" When Barnaby realizes that the legal, physical, and psychological walls of the train are impenetrable, he turns to the only tool left to the modern consumer: digital feedback. His decision to post a 1-star review on the Global Rail Advisor app acts as a \"logic bomb\" that shatters the simulation. The book explores the hilarious and terrifying aftermath of what happens when the screen goes black and the elite are forced to step out into the \"real\" world-a world of gray skies, wet gravel, and uncurated chaos. This is a story about the end of the road-or rather, the realization that the road was never there to begin with. It is an exploration of how we use technology to hide from the environment while claiming to save it, and how one man's refusal to \"enjoy the ride\" becomes a revolutionary act of truth-telling. From the terrifyingly efficient Security Chief Larry to the silent, judgmental Ferret that becomes Barnaby's only honest companion, The Stationary Horizon is a surrealist masterpiece that asks: if a train doesn't move, but everyone on board agrees that the scenery is beautiful, does the destination even matter? Prepare for a journey that goes absolutely nowhere, but changes everything","brand":"fAIzi","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":53813087600982,"sku":null,"price":0.0,"currency_code":"EUR","in_stock":false}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0925\/5829\/5382\/files\/product_image_9798232450212_1.jpg?v=1781818296","url":"https:\/\/www.momoxbooks.com\/products\/faizi-the-buffet-car-at-the-end-of-the-world-9798232450212","provider":"momoxbooks","version":"1.0","type":"link"}