Disillusioned with her work life, Mun-gyeong goes on a vacation to Mungyeong City on a whim. There, she and Ga-eun, a Buddhist nun who was taking travelling practice, rescue a stray dog, Gil-soon. The three unite and spend a night of emotional solidarity at an old lady's house. The protagonist, Mun-gyeong, does not visit Mungyeong just because of the similarity in names but because it is the hometown of the former temp worker, Cho-wol, who managed much of the department’s workload. On her spontaneous journey, Mun-gyeong encounters Ga-eun, a Buddhist nun, and Gil-soon, a dog Ga-eun has been protecting, and then an older woman who mistakenly thinks Gil-soon is her missing dog, which leads her to spend a night at the woman’s home. Everything occurring in Mungyeong: More than Roads can be viewed as a series of coincidences. Yet, in life, events unfold as coincidence and fate are intricately woven together, much like the warp and weft in fabric. The relationships that arise from this inte ...