Every office worker is digging a hole somewhere inside themselves. For Associate Lee, corporate life is an endless cycle of:crowded subway rides, meaningless meetings, Excel disasters, late-night overtime, and carefully rehearsed smiles. But beneath the fluorescent lights and office politics, he hides another identity. At dawn, while the rest of the city sleeps, he becomes "Fire Lee" - a writer digging an entirely different world beneath reality itself.
The Digging Man is a darkly humorous and emotionally resonant literary novel that transforms ordinary workplace exhaustion into a surreal survival story. Across 27 interconnected episodes, this uniquely Korean office chronicle explores: burnout, commuting anxiety, corporate hierarchy, creative frustration, and the quiet determination required to keep dreaming in a world designed to consume you. Blending satire, introspection, and existential humor, Fire Lee captures the strange emotional landscape of modern office life with painful honesty and unexpected warmth.
For readers who have ever: stared blankly at spreadsheets, feared Slack notifications, survived convenience-store dinners, or secretly imagined another life while commuting home- this story will feel uncomfortably familiar. Some people adapt to the sinkhole. Others dig deeper.
Every office worker is digging a hole somewhere inside themselves. For Associate Lee, corporate life is an endless cycle of:crowded subway rides, meaningless meetings, Excel disasters, late-night overtime, and carefully rehearsed smiles. But beneath the fluorescent lights and office politics, he hides another identity. At dawn, while the rest of the city sleeps, he becomes "Fire Lee" - a writer digging an entirely different world beneath reality itself.
The Digging Man is a darkly humorous and emotionally resonant literary novel that transforms ordinary workplace exhaustion into a surreal survival story. Across 27 interconnected episodes, this uniquely Korean office chronicle explores: burnout, commuting anxiety, corporate hierarchy, creative frustration, and the quiet determination required to keep dreaming in a world designed to consume you. Blending satire, introspection, and existential humor, Fire Lee captures the strange emotional landscape of modern office life with painful honesty and unexpected warmth.
For readers who have ever: stared blankly at spreadsheets, feared Slack notifications, survived convenience-store dinners, or secretly imagined another life while commuting home- this story will feel uncomfortably familiar. Some people adapt to the sinkhole. Others dig deeper.