An unemployed writer Al Bari, Komu, endures incessant verbal affront from his abusive breadwinner wife until he loses his restraint and strangles her to death. He then recounts to his wife’s dead body how his life has been a diurnal torture inflicted by her and how it resembled the way Zeus inflicted a perpetual torment on Sysiphus, the mythological king of Corinth. It turns out that unable to part with his wife, his daily revenge pans out merely in stories that he pens everyday, only to rip them apart immediately afterward, continuing to endure this repeating torture, gleaming aspiration from his favorite absurdist Albert Camus’s rare optimist take on the ill-fated Corinthian.