Quiet streets, lit-up windows, and the stories left between pages — a 5-part Yeonnam essay.
Written by 연남 산책자
It rained, the bookshop kept its lights on, and someone left a single sentence on the windowsill. The yellow lamp behind the counter spelled an open invitation, and a poetry book lay face-up next to it — as if the rain had been waiting for someone to read.
It was a late afternoon when the rain began. I closed my umbrella and stepped into , where a yellow lamp glowed beside the counter and a single line was written on a small piece of paper: *"I'll come back when the rain stops."*
The owner was sorting books behind the counter, and I was the only customer. The sound of rain stayed between the shelves like quiet background music. I took the poetry book he handed me and walked through the alley to .
The cafe's wide window held the rain whole. As I sat with a warm latte, I heard someone unfolding an umbrella from . A small mural on the wall — someone's drawing of a cat caught in the rain — felt exactly right for the day.
The last stop was , where I opened an old volume in the 1980s poetry section. A pressed maple leaf, slipped in years ago, fell out.
A rainy day in Yeonnam was, in the end, a neighborhood that quietly gathers the sentences and leaves that someone left behind. As I closed the book, I thought about coming back tomorrow — when the rain stops, just as the note had promised.
The next afternoon, the rain had stopped but the umbrella was still leaning by the bookshop window. A name tag hung from the handle, and the…
The maple leaf from the old poetry book had a date written on its stem. It was not old enough to be a memory, but it was too exact to be a c…
Friday at 5:20 p.m., the sky was dry and bright. The only thing that smelled like rain was a chocolate wrapper folded into the shape of an e…
Inside the smallest drawer was not a letter, but a route. Four places were circled in pencil, and at the center of the page someone had writ…