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The 1619 Project: Born on the Water
The 1619 Project: Born on the Water | Renée Watson, Nikole Hannah-Jones
20 posts | 22 read | 9 to read
The 1619 Project’s lyrical picture book in verse chronicles the consequences of slavery and the history of Black resistance in the United States, thoughtfully rendered by Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Nikole Hannah-Jones and Newbery honor-winning author Renée Watson. A young student receives a family tree assignment in school, but she can only trace back three generations. Grandma gathers the whole family, and the student learns that 400 years ago, in 1619, their ancestors were stolen and brought to America by white slave traders. But before that, they had a home, a land, a language. She learns how the people said to be born on the water survived. And the people planted dreams and hope, willed themselves to keep living, living. And the people learned new words for love for friend for family for joy for grow for home. With powerful verse and striking illustrations by Nikkolas Smith, Born on the Water provides a pathway for readers of all ages to reflect on the origins of American identity.
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underground_bks
The 1619 Project: Born on the Water | Renée Watson, Nikole Hannah-Jones
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Pickpick

Read for Banned Books Week! This moving and necessary picture book offers a much-needed new perspective on the tragic loss of known ancestry for many African-Americans due to the Middle Passage and chattel slavery. This is an inspiring and beautifully illustrated story about American identity and Black history well worth spending time with not only for children but adults too.

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LibrarianRyan
1619 Project: Born on the Water | Renée Watson, Nikole Hannah-Jones
Pickpick

4 â­ I am not the right person to critique this book. I liked this book. It‘s part of the 1619 Project about the history of Black Americans and how they came to be in this country. What is unique about this book is, it‘s all poetry that creates one story. This is normally found in much bigger longer works. The illustrations are strange, but beautiful. They put emotion to the paper to match the words.

LibrarianRyan I can fully say that I thought this book was fantastic, but also realize that I am in no place to critique this book. 1y
27 likes1 comment
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GatheringBooks
The 1619 Project: Born on the Water | Renée Watson, Nikole Hannah-Jones
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#MayMontage Day 28: #Water - The book begins with questions. Written in verse, this is a story that cannot be told in prose. Poetry distils the essence of pain, courage, wisdom – the enormity of emotions unbound, in rhythm and heartbeat. There is unmatched power here that started off with shame transformed into discovered joy in one‘s unexplored ancestry. My review: https://wp.me/pDlzr-pf2

BookmarkTavern Oh that looks beautiful! â¤ï¸ 2y
Eggs Perfect 💧🩵💦 2y
45 likes2 comments
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rebbyj
1619 Project: Born on the Water | Renée Watson, Nikole Hannah-Jones
Mehso-so

Good intention

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SoManyBooksNotEnoughTime
The 1619 Project: Born on the Water | Renée Watson, Nikole Hannah-Jones
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Pickpick

I bought this children's book awhile back, around the time it was released. It's been sitting on my bookshelf unread ever since. Since the 1619 Project has a screen adaptation coming out this month, I decided to finally pick this up. I am so glad I did. While it's written for children, I still learned a few things I hadn't known going into this book. And the illustrations!! My God, the illustrations are gorgeous.

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mandarchy
1619 Project: Born on the Water | Renée Watson, Nikole Hannah-Jones
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As a descendent of 3 Mayflower passengers, I have heard so much about our myth. The whole pilgrim story was so inflated in my grandmother's lifetime. The General Society of Descendants was started just before she was born. We need more stories. Celebrating Thanksgiving is fine, but can we give up the myths and the white protestant idealization? BTW the illustrations are as intense as the words in this book. Happy 🦃 day!

Singout Absolutely! Not so much Pilgrims here in Canada (and I am grateful for growing up in rural churches where Thanksgiving was about harvest, although that needs to be tied in to who “owns†and controls the land), but “heroic†colonizers and my grandparents day being descended from Loyalists. 2y
Suet624 I hear you. My mother was the same. We are the descendants of the “doctor†who was originally a butcher until he got on the boat. (edited) 2y
mandarchy @Singout A lot of people from our colonies moved to your colonies because of the revolution. I read the First Blade of Sweetgrass to a group of 3rd grade just Tuesday and the theme really sunk in: leave something for the next generation, but based on the story that meant their grandchildren! They hadn't thought of their grandchildren yet. I don't think the colonizers gave us much thought. 2y
mandarchy @Suet624 I'm not sure who that was. The family stories are varied and there about 35 million descendants! 2y
47 likes4 comments
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coffees
1619 Project: Born on the Water | Renée Watson, Nikole Hannah-Jones
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Pickpick

I've heard of this book before and oh my, it looks like I have a kids version of it?? It was a good read but also made me feel ashamed for not knowing my own roots (and no, I can't really remedy this like the character in the book). It doesn't contribute to my current knowledge in #africanamerican #history but I think it's mainly bc this is meant as one of those intro books, esp for younger audiences. Also fosters self-love and community ðŸ‘

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Nutmegnc
1619 Project: Born on the Water | Renée Watson, Nikole Hannah-Jones
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1. Saint‘s Song by Garrett Leigh. Somewhere in England I‘ve never heard of and frankly didn‘t really pay much attention to. For broody, angsty, steamy reasons 🤣🤣🤣. 2. The last 5 â­ï¸ read was actually the tagged kid‘s book. 3. I‘m excited for Alexis Hall‘s Husband Material.

Nutmegnc @RaeLovesToRead thanks for the tag! (edited) 3y
Eggs Thanks for playing ðŸ™ðŸ»ðŸ¤— 3y
Prairiegirl_reading I‘m excited for husband material too! 3y
Nutmegnc @Prairiegirl_reading ðŸ˜ðŸ˜ðŸ˜ 3y
36 likes5 comments
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Nutmegnc
1619 Project: Born on the Water | Renée Watson, Nikole Hannah-Jones
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Great text, chunked into small parts. The audio is the author, and I enjoyed hearing her voice. The real winner here is the illustration. Well done, Nikkolas Smith!!

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Cortg
1619 Project: Born on the Water | Renée Watson, Nikole Hannah-Jones
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A beautiful children‘s picture book to compliment the adult book. A young African American asks where her ancestors are from, her grandmother tells her a story. #booked2022 ~from a black-owned or -centric imprint or publisher

Cinfhen Lovely â˜ºï¸ 3y
28 likes1 comment
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ReadingEnvy
1619 Project: Born on the Water | Renée Watson, Nikole Hannah-Jones
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Pickpick

This is one version of The 1619 Project for kids, both centering slavery in the historical narrative but also discussing what came before and after. It starts with a young person assigned a genealogy project, which most kids will be able to relate to. I listened to the audio and it's told in verse with some repeating/emphasized phrases. I plan to read the adult version this year.

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kspenmoll
1619 Project: Born on the Water | Renée Watson, Nikole Hannah-Jones
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Whimsical,joyful,&heartbreaking,the book‘s illustrations & verse convey the humanity of the Ndongo people.Darkness descends when they are kidnapped & sail,chained to each other,under the deck of the White lion.â€Packed in dark misery,/strangers chained together/These many people/became one people,/a new people/And that is why the people say,/we were born on the water./We come from people who refused to die.â€A book of generations of resilience.

alisiakae Great review! I definitely want to read this too. 3y
kspenmoll @4thhouseontheleft It should be read in all classrooms. But I fear it would not get approved by Boards of Ed. 3y
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Cortg
1619 Project: Born on the Water | Renée Watson, Nikole Hannah-Jones
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Pickpick

While I wait for my library hold for the adult book, I took some time to read this beautifully illustrated picture book written in verse. This is an absolutely stunning piece of work. #pop22 ~ a book you can read in one sitting #JumpStart2022

@KarenUK @Cinfhen @Kalalalatja @Megabooks @4thhouseontheleft @BarbaraBB @Laughterhp @RaeLovesToRead @Clwojick @Lizpixie

Cinfhen I love children‘s books!!!! 3y
BarbaraBB Gorgeous illustration 😠3y
Cortg @BarbaraBB The artwork is amazing! 3y
Cortg @Cinfhen Children‘s nonfiction always sums things up so nicely! 3y
44 likes4 comments
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kspenmoll
1619 Project: Born on the Water | Renée Watson, Nikole Hannah-Jones
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#weeklyforecast

Here are my hopes for this week. Ambitious given work, but some are just buddy read sections.

ravenlee You can do it! 3y
BookBabe You have a book club candle?! 😠3y
kspenmoll @BookBabe A Christmas gift from my sister! 3y
kspenmoll @ravenlee Thanks for being my personal cheerleader!!!‘ 3y
ravenlee ðŸ˜ðŸ‘ 3y
65 likes1 stack add5 comments
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amma-keep-reading
1619 Project: Born on the Water | Renée Watson, Nikole Hannah-Jones
Pickpick

A starting point for children.

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JoyBlue
1619 Project: Born on the Water | Renée Watson, Nikole Hannah-Jones
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Pickpick
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Graciouswarriorprincess
1619 Project: Born on the Water | Renée Watson, Nikole Hannah-Jones
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Book 154 of the year.

BookBabe 😮 Wow, that‘s a lot of books! 🙌🻠3y
Graciouswarriorprincess @BookBabe Thanks! 😀 3y
43 likes2 comments
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shadowsdogs
1619 Project: Born on the Water | Renée Watson, Nikole Hannah-Jones
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Pickpick

This book is a young girl asking her grandmother where her ancestors came from and it‘s written in poetry. I loved it

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megnews
1619 Project: Born on the Water | Renée Watson, Nikole Hannah-Jones
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Pickpick

Just finished the audio of this picture book. If the cover is any indication, I can‘t wait to see the illustrations. A great addition to school, classroom, & home libraries.
Anticipating great discussions during the #1619GroupRead coming in January. See the original announcement @4thhouseontheleft ‘s page for more info.

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