Margaret Read MacDonald

Margaret Read MacDonald (born January 21, 1940) is an American storyteller, folklorist, and author of children’s books. She is known for her "tellable" folktale renditions, which enable users to share folktales with children easily.

Early life

Raised in a rural Southern Indiana community near the Muscatatuck River, daughter of Murray Read and Mildred Amick Read. Her family was active in the North Vernon Methodist Church. Her mother, raised as a farm girl near Scipio, Indiana, read James Whitcomb Riley’s poetry at bedtime, instilling rhythms in Margaret’s head.

Career

MacDonald combined experience from 35 years as a children’s librarian (San Francisco Public; Oahu bookmobiles; Singapore American School; Mountain-Valley Library System; Montgomery County Maryland; King County Library System) with her degree in folklore (Ph.D. Indiana University Folklore Institute 1979) to create tellable folktale collections and picture books "so rhythmic and conversational even a first-time storyteller will be successful." Her books have been translated into 13 languages.

As folklorist, MacDonald interviewed traditional tellers to produce Scipio Storytelling: Talk in a Southern Indiana Community and Ten Traditional Tellers. Her folktale index The Storyteller’s Sourcebook: A Subject, Title, and Motif-Index to Folklore Collections for Children received an American Library Association Reference and Technical Services Award for Best Reference Source in 1982. "An index that facilitates access to more than 900 books with a system based partly on Stith Thompson’s Motif-Index deserves an accolade for its enterprise and thoroughness..."

Her folktale picture books, such as Fat Cat and Party Croc! are known for their rhythmic quality and easy readability. "The patterned text lends itself to audience participation in MacDonald’s trademark style"

MacDonald taught courses in storytelling at the University of Washington and for Lesley University. In 1995-96 she was a Fulbright Scholar in Mahasarakham, Thailand and after her retirement in 2002 she has spent much time touring abroad teaching storytelling techniques and performing. She recruited tellers to put their countries’ tales into print and edited folktale collections by tellers from Argentina, Cuba, Brazil, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, and Saudi Arabia. MacDonald received the Talking Leaves Award from the National Storytelling Network in 2001.

Family: Married to James Bruce Macdonald, daughters Julie Liana MacDonald Martin and Jennifer Skye MacDonald Whitman. Residences in Des Moines, Washington and Guemes Island, Washington.

WORKS

Picture Books

Folklore Collections

Edited Folklore Collections

Storytelling Handbooks

Reference Books

Folklore Studies

Community History

CD/DVD

Selected Book Awards and Honors

References

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