🕯 Countdown to the Cover

Remember Me When the Stars Fade

by Aria Wren Holloway

Releasing this Monday


The stars came back wrong the night Elodie turned seventeen. That’s the first line—and already you know: this is a story that remembers what you’ve tried to forget.

Today, we’re stepping into the quiet, reverent breath before impact. This Saturday marks the final Countdown to the Cover before Monday’s official release of Remember Me When the Stars Fade—a novel that refuses to be silenced, much like the stars it follows.

But this isn’t just a cover reveal. This is a threshold.


Beneath the Surface of a Star-Stained Silence

At first glance, Aria Wren Holloway’s debut novel wears the skin of a quiet, literary YA tale—introspective, lyrical, soaked in memory. But look closer. This book hums with otherworldly energy, tethered to the emotional gravity of grief, loss, and the impossible beauty of things left unsaid.

It follows Elodie—an artist, a girl on the edge, a girl who refuses to forget. When her best friend Isaac disappears, Elodie’s world fractures. The adults call it a tragedy. The town calls it a shame. But Elodie calls it something else: unfinished.

That’s when the stars start marking her body. A new constellation appears beneath her collarbone. Then another. And another. As the town forgets Isaac, as the silence thickens, Elodie begins to uncover a deeper, older story—one written across the sky and stitched beneath her skin.


A Cover That Speaks in Starlight

Now, let’s talk about this cover—because it’s not just art. It’s mythology. It’s prophecy. It’s a map

“Girl sitting on a rooftop at night, wrapped in a blanket, sketching constellations while gazing at the stars above a glowing coastal town.”

Designed with haunting precision, the cover of Remember Me When the Stars Fade features a silhouetted figure (Elodie) standing beneath a navy cosmos. Her back is turned to us, and yet we know her. She carries the weight of absence in her posture. Her constellation—burning faintly in the shape of a heart—isn’t just a design element; it’s narrative code.

The heart isn’t full. It’s stitched. Incomplete. Pulsing with what was lost and what still remains.

Look closely: the stars around her aren’t random. Each is placed like a breadcrumb. Holloway’s prose mirrors this visual world—poetic, deliberate, and full of quiet power.

The skyline behind her suggests dusk: the liminal time between presence and absence, between what you remember and what the world erases. Just like the title.


A Story That Refuses to Forget

At the heart of the book lies a central tension: memory versus silence. What happens when the world moves on but you can’t? What if the stars themselves are trying to show you the way back to what was lost?

“Young woman sketching a constellation at her desk, surrounded by star charts and string lights, with a handwritten note that says ‘Do you remember?’”

This theme threads itself through every scene in the novel—across rooftops, old observatories, forgotten yearbooks, and abandoned greenhouses. Elodie becomes a cartographer of the unseen, mapping constellations onto both her town and her soul. Each new star is a reminder, a wound, a portal.

Holloway has written a grief story wrapped in speculative fabric. It’s deeply human and subtly magical. Readers of The Raven Cycle, The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue, or The Weight of Light will feel right at home.

But more than anything, this book is for those who have lost something that no one else remembers. A person. A time. A version of yourself.


The Origin of the Title

We asked Aria Wren Holloway where the title came from. Her answer?

“Grief is quieter than people think. It’s not screaming in the rain—it’s walking down your street and realizing someone’s name doesn’t echo anymore. I wanted the stars to be a metaphor for memory—and the title to ask the question: what remains after the light fades? What lingers in us? What burns back to life?”

"Silhouetted figure walking a misty path toward an observatory at sunrise, holding a worn notebook."

It’s no surprise, then, that this book doesn’t scream. It whispers. It pulses. It burns quietly, until you notice it’s stitched itself to your own memory.


The Countdown Ends Monday

This weekend, as the stars appear above your house, remember: they’re more than just lights in the sky. For Elodie, they’re a language. A warning. A guide. And for readers, they’re the shape of a story you won’t forget.

On Monday, this book releases into the world. Pre-orders are still open—and if you grab your copy before launch day, you’ll receive an exclusive constellation map print designed to pair with the book’s central mystery. These are available only through the pre-order period and only in limited quantity.


What This Cover Teaches Us About the Story

Every cover is a portal. And this one? It teaches us that not all journeys begin with footsteps. Some begin with pulses. With stars. With memory.

This cover dares you to enter a story without clear answers—just the throb of grief, love, and light beneath your skin. It invites you to feel before you understand. To wonder before you believe.

It’s more than beautiful. It’s earned.


Reader Reflection Prompt

🌌 If your heart was a constellation, what shape would it take?
Share your thoughts below or drop a ✍️ in the comments if you’ve ever written your own grief into the stars.


Until Monday… keep watching the sky. The silence may forget, but the stars remember.

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