Welcome to my guest poetry poster of the day, the woman with the best name ever, Renée LaTulippe!
Facebook page for No Water River
Follow Renee on Twitter
Please stop what you’re doing and recite these four lines out loud right now. I’ll wait.
The very deep did rot – O Christ!
That ever this should be!
Yea, slimy things did crawl with legs
Upon the slimy sea.
–The Rime of the Ancient Mariner by Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Good! Now do it again, but really put some oomph into it! Add some hand gestures. Put some tension in your muscles. Change your voice. Chew those words up, suck out all their juices, and spit them out through your teeth. Go ahead, no one’s watching.
Great job! Now didn’t that feel…liberating? Wasn’t it fun? Can you imagine the looks on kids’ faces if you recited it with that much energy and that much animation and that much joy in every word? And what if the kids memorized it and chanted it and put on costumes and acted it out? Why, I’d bet they’d come away saying poetry ain’t so bad after all.
And they’d say that because they had lived the poetry. They hadn’t just sat at their desks dissecting it, tearing out its innards, counting metaphors, rummaging through the gore looking for meaning.
Poetry is alive! Poetry is meant to be spoken and heard and savored by ears, mouth, eyes, bodies. The very deep did rot! My goodness, that can’t be good! I can’t read those lines sitting in a chair. They bring me to my swollen feet; they give me a hunched back and a ruined, gravelly voice.
The joy of poetry is what led me to creating my video blog, No Water River. I had a stash of children’s poems clamoring to be heard, and thought Hey, why don’t I record these babies and put ‘em online? So I did.
But that didn’t seem like enough. I started thinking about how much time even young kids spend on the computer, and thought, Wouldn’t it be neat to put even more poetry in front of them so they can see it and hear it? That’s when I started asking other poets to join me and add their voices and poems, which has since snowballed into a mission to create a vast online video library of children’s poets reading their own work.
For Poetry Month, then, I invited some notable poets and authors to contribute videos to the library, and was so pleasantly surprised to receive enthusiastic responses. This month, I am pleased to be hosting
Laura Purdie Salas
Lee Wardlaw
Kenn Nesbitt
Julie Larios
Greg Pincus
Irene Latham
Kate Coombs
Debbie Diesen
J. Patrick Lewis, current U.S. Children’s Poet Laureate
Their accessibility and willingness to throw themselves into the world of video – most for the first time – is a testament to their dedication to children’s poetry and their shared goal of making poetry come alive for as many kids as we can reach.
When can you see them? Starting on April 2 with Michael Rosen, check in at No Water River on Mondays and Fridays throughout April to see and hear these accomplished poets sharing their work. If you don’t want to miss any, “like” NWR on Facebook to be notified of new posts.
I hope that as the library grows, parents, teachers, and librarians will use it as a resource to foster an early appreciation of poetry. If you’d like to help the cause, please share the poetry video library with parents, teachers, and kids!
To thank you, I leave you with this melancholy pig video. This Pig’s Got the Blues
15 Comments
Renee LaTulippe
Hey everyone! Please note there were some last-minute changes to the list of poets that I couldn’t get to Katie in time, so here’s the complete schedule:
April 2 ~ Kenn Nesbitt
April 6 ~ Amy Ludwig VanDerwater
April 9 ~ Laura Purdie Salas
April 13 ~ Deborah Diesen
April 16 ~ Greg Pincus
April 18 ~ Charles Waters
April 20 ~ Irene Latham
April 23 ~ Julie Larios
April 27 ~ Lee Wardlaw
April 30 ~ J. Patrick Lewis
Thanks so much to Katie for getting the word out. Now as Alan Katz said – get out there and poetize!
Joanna
I am writing this on my feet, laptop in arm, as attacking Coleridge on your urging has me all worked up! Fabulous exhortations, Renée. As you know I am a huge poetry fan, for babes bairns and babushkas. I love what you are doing with No Water River and am looking forward to my biweekly poetic-video dose this month!
Renee LaTulippe
HA! Great image, Joanna! For some reason, when I was a grad student, I started reciting that poem whenever I was really frustrated. Don’t know why, but at least it usually got me giggling. 🙂
Pam
A WEALTH OF RESOURCES!!! What else can I say? I’m tingly! I can’t stay still! I’m itchy! I’m so excited! Either that, or I’m getting a rash from that sleeve of Do si Dos I just polished off. Seriously, this is great! Renee, I’ll be posting on your blog all month long. And how much do I love Brain Burps? You’re amazing, Katie! Such a creative, hard working supporter of kidlit! We appreciate you!
Pam
oops, I meant commenting on your blog Renee!
Renee LaTulippe
If you’ve got the time, you can post for me too, and I’ll go join Katie at the beach!
katie
Thank you! And so happy you all are enjoying this!
katie
I’m not at the beach! I’m in the mountains, skiing!
Renee LaTulippe
HA! I had no idea what you might be up to, so I took a shot!
OK, then, revised comment to Pam: you can take over my blog while I go swooshing with Katie!
Cathy Mealey
How sad that when one googles “Ancient Mariner” you get page after page of Iron Maiden links!
Tip: Add “Coleridge” to your search terms!
“…a spring of love gush’d from my heart and I bless’d them unaware…”
Great lineup for April at NWR!
Renee LaTulippe
You must be using Hard Rock Google. Try switching to Literary Google like me, and you’ll get what you’re looking for.
Eric Van Raepenbusch
Renee, your videos have taught me how much poetry can be. This is such a great way to celebrate Poetry Month.
Renee LaTulippe
Aw, wow, what a lovely sentiment. HUGS!
Julie Hedlund
Renee, you are such an inspiration! Because of you, I may very well recover from my fear of poetry – instilled in me by a college professor sophomore year. 🙂
Renee LaTulippe
Julie, I think I had that same college professor! I hope you overcome it very very soon, as you know I’d love to have you on NWR. Thank you so much for your kind words. 🙂