Agua, Agüita  (Water, Little Water)
    
    
        Agua, Agüita  (Water, Little Water)
    
    Felipe Ugalde Alcántara (Illustrator)
“My name / is Water / but everyone / calls me Little Water.” In this beautiful, poetic ode to the life-giving force of water, award-winning children’s book author Jorge Argueta describes—in English, Spanish and Nahuat—the life cycle of water from the perspective of one drop.
From its birth deep in Mother Earth, Little Water climbs to the surface, passing through roots and rocks, light and darkness. Finally, the tiny bead of water makes it to the top and rests, “a sigh of morning dew,” hanging on “the tips of leaves / on spider webs / or on the petals / of flowers.” The droplet becomes a river, a lake, an ocean, ultimately climbing to the sky and turning into a cloud. Then, “drop by drop / I return singing / to our Mother Earth. I am Little Water. / I am life.”
With stunningly beautiful illustrations by Felipe Ugalde Alcántara that depict the mountains, rocks, vegetation and animals of the natural world, this poem about the importance of water reflects Argueta’s indigenous roots and his appreciation for nature. Containing the English and Spanish text on each page, the entire poem appears at the end in Nahuat, the language of Argueta’s Pipil-Nahua ancestors. This book is an excellent choice to encourage children to write their own poems about the natural world and to begin conversations about the interconnected web of life.
    Creator:
        Nicolas Kanellos
    
    Area:
        Houston / Third Ward-MacGregor
    
    Contributor:
        Arte Público Press
    
    Source:
        Center for Mexican American Studies
    
Uploaded by:
    Marisela Martinez
    Copyright status:
        In copyright
    
    
        Center for Mexican American Studies
    
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