
Poetry, chapbook, 36 pages, from Bottlecap Features.
The Stars Do Not Call Your Name, But They Remember How it Sounded is a chapbook about strong emotions, creation, and the universal search for belonging. It sits quietly with sorrow and burns with the rage of survival. In poems that explore creation as resistance and love, the author turns pain into art, loneliness into light, and silence into something that speaks.
This collection is for everyone who’s felt out of place, lost a friendship that changed them, or yelled up at the night sky hoping for a sign. These poems speak with grief and with anger, reminding us that even when we feel isolated we’re still connected—to each other, to our past, and to the places we’re learning to call home.
Salem Avery writes poetry based in the complexities of identity, self-acceptance, and resilience, offering readers a space to feel seen in their own journeys. Driven by honesty and heart, their writing transforms pain into connection and silence into voice. They write with the belief that stories and songs, especially those born from survival, can be lifelines.