Sun Again and 98°

By Rob Carney


The front door open, stereo on, the first trace of a new moon — there, and then not there, then back again as the clouds moved — just a trace as thin as a question mark, and then finally the wind. After three straight weeks without it, you know what I mean.

The lightning started, which was good, and what it seemed to be promising was good: bolts of it, flashes, quick rivers for an instant over our heads, over the valley, and on toward the mountains; you know what it’s like. Like someone with a face so beautiful you have to concentrate to listen.

Like when you’re hungry: warm bread. Like when you’re hungry: how the kitchen smells.

Like after so much sun, a sudden rain.


Rob Carney, of Salt Lake City, is the author of nine books, including “The Book of Sharks” (Black Lawrence Press 2018), which won the 15 Bytes Book Award for Poetry, and “Accidental Gardens,” 42 flash essays about the environment, politics and poetics (Stormbird Press 2021).