In most portal fantasies, the author falls into the book. Matthew Seo gets the opposite problem: the book breaks into his apartment, tracks mud and magic across the floor, and asks for compensation. His abandoned villains must learn delivery apps, landlord notices, fake identities, and capitalism while Matthew writes fast enough to keep them from blurring away. But the more readers love their chaos, the louder the unfinished story demands an ending.
In most portal fantasies, the author falls into the book. Matthew Seo gets the opposite problem: the book breaks into his apartment, tracks mud and magic across the floor, and asks for compensation. His abandoned villains must learn delivery apps, landlord notices, fake identities, and capitalism while Matthew writes fast enough to keep them from blurring away. But the more readers love their chaos, the louder the unfinished story demands an ending.
In most portal fantasies, the author falls into the book. Matthew Seo gets the opposite problem: the book breaks into his apartment, tracks mud and magic across the floor, and asks for compensation. His abandoned villains must learn delivery apps, landlord notices, fake identities, and capitalism while Matthew writes fast enough to keep them from blurring away. But the more readers love their chaos, the louder the unfinished story demands an ending.