What's being said about the book: Making a Way out of No Way

“Monica Coleman’s elegant prose makes Making a Way out of No Way a clear and accessible introduction to postmodern womanist theology. This book is a wonderful synthesis of the best of the past with attention to the foibles of our twenty-first-century present and realistic hope for creative future possibilities.”

Karen Baker-Fletcher,  Ph.D. Professor of Systematic Theology at Perkins School of Theology,  Southern Methodist University 

Praise for the book


“Monica Coleman’s elegant prose makes Making a Way out of No Way a clear and accessible introduction to postmodern womanist theology, which realizes healing and wholeness through processes of creative transformation in a world fraught with destructive transformation. This book is a wonderful synthesis of the best of the past with attention to the foibles of our twenty-first-century present and realistic hope for creative future possibilities.”

Karen Baker-Fletcher, Ph.D. 
Professor of Systematic Theology

Perkins School of Theology, Southern Methodist University

“Using process metaphysics as a theological framework, Monica Coleman offers a challenging constructive womanist theology.  It is an important postmodern theological statement that speaks to religious pluralism and the realities of black women's lives." 


James H. Cone, Ph.D.
Charles Augustus Briggs Distinguished Professor of Systematic Theology
Union Theological Seminary in New York City

“This book is classic Monica Coleman: interdisciplinary, interreligious, professional and personal, cutting edge and linked to traditions. She crafts a womanist theology interwoven with postmodern and process theologies. Rooted in the Christian gospel, this text also draws on Yoruba religion. And then we are graced with the way-out-of-no-way resulting in a vision for a communal theology.”

Dwight N. Hopkins, Ph.D.
Professor of Theology
University of Chicago Divinity School
Author of Being Human: Race, Culture, and Religion

“The introduction to this powerful book speaks of braiding Lisa’s hair at a domestic violence shelter, naming that braiding as an act of salvation. The book itself is a kind of braiding, for Coleman brilliantly weaves womanist, process, and black theologies together in a creative synthesis that takes all three into new territory. Monica Coleman’s clear voice and vision will help to shape the future of theology.” 

Marjorie Hewitt Suchocki, Ph.D.
Ingraham Professor of Theology Emerita
Claremont School of Theology