
The Writings of Jennifer Rene Wallace
From Scar Tissue to Stardust
Poetry born from survival, faith, love, loss, and the quiet courage of becoming.
Welcome
A Place for Wound and Wonder
I’m Jennifer Wallace, a poet, survivor, and storyteller who believes words can hold both ache and light.
This space was created for those who have loved deeply, grieved quietly, fought battles unseen, and are still learning how to bloom.
Letters from Stardust
Not everything I write makes it into the book.
Sometimes it becomes a quiet reflection.
Sometimes it becomes the story behind a poem.
Sometimes it becomes a reminder for the souls who still believe in wonder.
If these words speak to something deep within you, I would love to stay connected.
One thoughtful letter a month. No noise. Just poetry, reflection, and a little stardust.
Featured Works
Books by Jennifer Wallace
A growing collection of poetry and reflections on survival, healing, faith, love, and the sacred work of becoming.
Available Now
Scar Tissue & Stardust
A poetry collection of survival, grief, healing, faith, and the luminous becoming that rises from broken places.
Coming Next
The Quiet Becoming
A future collection exploring aftermath, self-acceptance, healthy love, spiritual restoration, and the soft strength of continuing.
The Journal
Notes from the Quiet Becoming
The journal of Scar Tissue & Stardust
Reflections on poetry, healing, faith, survival, creativity, and the sacred work of becoming.
A place where stories continue beyond the page—where wounds, wonder, and the quiet unfolding of life find language.
Poetry with Purpose
Every Story Can Become a Seed
My poetry was born from survival, but its purpose reaches far beyond my own story.
Proceeds from Scar Tissue & Stardust help support BFF Youth Network, empowering youth and families through literacy, creativity, mentorship, and community.
Because healing doesn't end with one voice—it grows when we help others find theirs.
May you find yourself
somewhere between the scar
and the star.
May you remember -
you were never only what hurt you.
You were always becoming.
“Some stories are not written because we are whole, but because we survived what tried to break us.”
Jennifer Rene Wallace
Connect with Jennifer