Welcome to Faust Luxury Residences-where the rent is free, the branding is mandatory, and the fine print is eternal.
Gideon Cross thought he was signing a lease. Instead, he signed away his last shred of autonomy. Trapped in an apartment building that functions more like a corporate purgatory, Gideon descends through floor after floor of branded identities, subscription-based emotions, and performance reviews that feel more like judgment day.
Blending the existential dread of Kafka with the mythic descent of Dante, Gideon's Inferno is a darkly funny, disturbingly relatable novel about bureaucracy, identity, and the invisible contracts we sign just to stay afloat.