Marcie Alvis Walker is the creator of the popular Instagram feed Black Coffee with White Friends. She is also the creator of Black Eyed Stories. Marcie is passionate about what it means to embrace intersectionality, diversity, and inclusion in our spiritual lives. She lives in Chicago with her husband, her college-aged kid Max, and their dog, Evie.
Alvis Walker writes with an honesty that is both dauntless and compassionate, as she examines the intergenerational stories that have formed her. Masterful storytelling woven with nuanced spiritual reflection, this book is an artifact of grief, wonder, and resurrection. -Cole Arthur Riley, author of This Here Flesh These powerful words are medicine for those of us struggling with hope. Marcie Alvis Walker shows us how she is still coming into herself in a world stacked against her and those she loves. It's not mere resilience. It's revolutionary love. -Kevin Miguel Garcia, author of Bad Theology Kills Here are lyrics to a song you need to hear. Alvis Walker will take you by the hand and the heart through joy, loss, triumph, and the desert, to the summit. It is the perfect blend of divine revelation, painful upbringing, and soul-nourishing rejoicing. Every word is music. -J. S. Park, hospital chaplain and author of The Voices We Carry Everybody Come Alive is, quite simply, a work of art-beauty, pain, humor, and gospel wrapped into one stunning book. Marcie Alvis Walker has given us all a gift, and I am so grateful. -Saira Rao, New York Times bestselling co-author of White Women Whooo-what to say about Everybody Come Alive? It's less book, more psalm-a lyrical, resonant refrain that those of us who are Black and live in America recognize from a deep part of our souls. It's an alluring song, a sweet invitation for those who are non-Black to read, listen, and understand. And, most assuredly, it's a celebration of culture, identity, and life. -Karen Walrond, author of The Lightmaker's Manifesto and Radiant Rebellion Everybody Come Alive is a compelling invitation to life at a time when the world has made so many feel like zombies. The essays in this memoir hit you with thunderclaps of pain amid flashes of wonder. Alvis Walker's writing is so emotionally stirring and deliciously written that I kept wanting to stand up and applaud. -Jonathan Merritt, contributing writer for The Atlantic and author of Learning to Speak God from Scratch