Charleston County Public Library

Everybody come alive, a memoir in essays, Marcie Alvis-Walker, creator of Black coffee with white friends

Label
Everybody come alive, a memoir in essays, Marcie Alvis-Walker, creator of Black coffee with white friends
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 263-267)
resource.biographical
collective biography
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Everybody come alive
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
1379316746
Responsibility statement
Marcie Alvis-Walker, creator of Black coffee with white friends
Sub title
a memoir in essays
Summary
"Dazzling essays on faith, family and being a Black woman in America that explore what we do with the legacies we inherit, the faith that shapes our responses, and how we rebuild our stories for those who come after us--from the author of the popular blog Black Coffee with White Friends. On her blog, Marcie Alvis-Walker creates spaces for conversations about cultural norms, race, faith, and womanhood that encourage readers to unburden themselves from misconceptions they've inherited about the nature of God and their own identities. Now, in Everybody Come Alive, a deeply intimate and illuminating collection of lyrical essays written largely for a Black audience, Alvis-Walker invites readers into stories and personal histories from her own life. She tells candidly of her experience as a curious daughter raised under the watchful eye of the matriarchs who came before her. Readers are transported into stories of family, loyalty, and ambition; of assimilation, self-preservation, and risk; of creativity and the exercise of freedom. These essays reveal a journey of both inheritance and creation-a grappling of the things we are given, the things we must carry, and the ways we co-create life anew for ourselves and our communities. "Let us rejoice let us rejoice let us rejoice, " Alvis-Walker writes. "On the bad days when no one speaks for us let us rejoice. On the long days when all seems to speak against us let us rejoice, and on the empty days when no one can see us let us rejoice let us rejoice let." Alvis-Walker's unforgettable writing challenges readers to hold the contradictions that become inevitable and essential to every moment we encounter-moments that ultimately comprise the whole of our lives"--, Provided by publisher
Classification
Content
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