Alika Hope Brings Some People Are Homes To Life

Alika Hope releases Some People Are Homes, a reflective literary book exploring love, loss, and human connection through storytelling.

Jun 3, 2026

A Moment That Becomes a Mirror

There are moments in life when a sentence lands differently than expected, as if it has been waiting years to be understood. For Alika Hope, that sense of emotional recognition became the heartbeat of her newest release, Some People Are Homes: 20 Reflections on Love, Loss, and Hope. The book does not begin with spectacle or distance. Instead, it begins in the quiet spaces where memory, grief, and affection collide.

In those spaces, people are not simply characters in a story. They become places we return to in thought, sometimes without permission. Some People Are Homes asks readers to reconsider how deeply others shape their inner world.

The Origin of Some People Are Homes by Alika Hope

The creation of Some People Are Homes grew from a lifelong engagement with storytelling, performance, and human behavior. Alika Hope, an award-winning performer, professor, television host, author, and arts advocate, has spent her career observing how people connect, break apart, and rebuild themselves through experience.

As a Clinical Professor of Arts Administration at Wagner College in NYC, she teaches leadership, arts management, and music business while continuing her work in media and performance. That dual life in both academia and the arts informs the layered structure of her writing. Each reflection in Some People Are Homes feels both studied and deeply felt, as if emotion and analysis are constantly in dialogue.

Her academic path, which includes graduating from both The University of Notre Dame and Columbia University, shaped her ability to approach storytelling with both intellectual clarity and emotional depth.

Book cover of Some People Are Homes by Alika Hope displayed on a desk with glasses and pen nearby.

The Heart of the Book

At its core, Some People Are Homes is built around twenty interconnected reflections. These pieces move through grief, motherhood, identity, relationships, resilience, spirituality, and the search for belonging.

Rather than offering fixed answers, the book opens space for questions. It asks what remains of a person after they are gone from our lives. It explores how memory reshapes meaning over time. It considers how love can be both grounding and disruptive.

Hope captures this idea in one of the book’s defining reflections: “Some people become places we return to emotionally. This book is about the people who shape us, save us, break us, teach us, and stay with us long after they are gone.”

That sentiment defines the emotional architecture of Some People Are Homes. It is not a linear narrative. It is a layered experience of remembrance.

A Career Rooted in Story and Connection

The emotional resonance of Some People Are Homes is deeply connected to her broader career. As the host of New England Perspective TV on FOX61 in Connecticut, she highlights culture, travel, food, and the lived stories of communities across New England. Her work consistently centers human connection.

She is also the founder of The Ray of Hope Project, a nationally recognized arts initiative that uses music, spoken word, and storytelling to foster dialogue around history, empathy, and social justice. The organization has reached more than 12,000 participants through collaborations with schools, museums, libraries, and cultural institutions across the United States.

This foundation in public storytelling gives Some People Are Homes its grounded emotional voice. The book does not feel distant from real life. It feels born directly from it.

Recognition and Creative Perspective

Hope’s work across the arts and media has earned national recognition, including a Gold Global Music Award, a Gold Mom’s Choice Award, a Creative Child Magazine Award, the Gold Presidential Volunteer Service Award, and the title of Ms. New England America 2019.

Yet Some People Are Homes is not defined by accolades. Instead, it is defined by presence. The writing reflects an ongoing fascination with emotional truth, the complexity of identity, and the moments that make people feel seen.

In a cultural moment where many readers are seeking authenticity, the book aligns with a growing desire for work that does not simplify human experience but honors its contradictions.

Why This Book Resonates Now

The release of Some People Are Homes arrives during a time when conversations about emotional wellness, identity, loneliness, and connection are especially present in public discourse. Readers are increasingly drawn to narratives that reflect inner life with honesty rather than resolution.

This book meets that need without trying to solve it. Instead, it offers reflection as an experience in itself. It allows readers to sit with memory, revisit emotional landscapes, and recognize parts of themselves in the stories of others.

That is where its quiet strength lies. It does not rush the reader toward meaning. It allows meaning to emerge naturally.

A Closing Invitation to Readers

Some People Are Homes is now available on Amazon Kindle and in paperback. 

Readers who are drawn to emotionally intelligent storytelling, reflective literature, and narratives centered on human connection will find this work both intimate and expansive.

To explore the book, learn more about Alika Hope, or follow her ongoing creative and educational work, visit her official website, Instagram and Amazon.

Share on:

Copy Link

USA News Contributor

This article features partner, contributor, or branded content from a third party. Members of the USA News’ editorial staff were not involved in the creation of this content. All views and opinions are those of the contributor alone.

This article features partner, contributor, or branded content from a third party. Members of the USA News’ editorial staff were not involved in the creation of this content. All views and opinions are those of the contributor alone.

Related blogs

Related blogs

Copyright 2025 USA NEWS all rights reserved

Copyright 2025 USA NEWS all rights reserved

Copyright 2025 USA NEWS all rights reserved