isolation in the community. A predominantly negative image had taken root in the congregation's imagination and festered in the absence of meaningful relationships with neighbors. Rebuilding those relationships began with listening. In 2011, the congregation launched the Friday Gathering and invited members and neighbors to dine together each week.
More than forty diners shared stories about their lives with grace, humor, and occasionally brutal honesty. They challenge the stereotypes spawned by census data and headlines and dignify the resiliency of the soul and the
deep-seated need to belong. Many organizations, not just churches, want to be perceived as warm and
welcoming. But hospitality and charity often come with strings attached. Our norms and expectations about giving and receiving can be barriers to building trust, which is essential to building relationships. More Than Merely
Eyes Can See offers readers diverse perspectives on racial identity, the shortcomings of charity, opportunities to repair inequitable systems, and the power of relationships. There is risk that a story will change us, that we cannot go back to who we were, when it transforms how we see ourselves and others. Reviews
Written with the belief that listening to the stories of others is a powerful tool for building empathy...Susan Carey's humane community memoir More Than Merely Eyes Can See celebrates the power of shared storytelling...Arguing that storytelling and listening are acts of discovery and empathy, this is a text that celebrates individuality and that eschews labels and judgment...[H]istorical data and references to the work of experts are used to reinforce such notions of empathy building as crucial to healthy communities...A hope-filled, community-centered memoir that suggests that authentic service to others can have a positive impact on one's own relationships, More Than Merely Eyes Can See allows one church's dinner guests to tell their stories in their own voices.
- Clarion Foreward Reviews (May 16, 2024), starred review
- Marc Fitch, novelist and investigative reporter for CT Inside Investigator