About This Book
A middle-aged man reluctantly prepares for the compulsory first day of employment that arrives when he turns forty, as his family fusses and he adjusts his appearance and routine. The narrative satirizes a future society that restricts work to people forty and older and redistributes pensions, exposing the absurdities of age-based policy, ceremonial job-taking, and reliance on machines to run decision-making. Domestic comedy and technological detail illuminate the protagonist's discomfort with authority, the performative aspects of status, and the gap between public respectability and private uncertainty.
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