Keith McCune
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Keith McCune | |
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Born | Keith Michael McCune December 23, 1955 United States |
Occupation | Novelist, linguist, translator |
Alma mater | University of Michigan |
Website | |
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Keith Michael McCune (born December 23, 1955) is a linguist, novelist, and translator. His study of Indonesian roots has been called "perhaps the most detailed and complete single work in the field of phonosemantics,"[1] He has written a novel that retells the legend of the Pied Piper of Hamelin earned praise from Michael Boyer, the official Piper Piper of Hamelin, Germany.
Biography
McCune was born in 1955 to Frederick and Marguerite McCune. He attended college at the University of Virginia and went on to get his doctorate in linguistics at the University of Michigan,[2] where he met Grace Osborn, who was also pursuing a doctorate in linguistics and later married him.
He and Grace spent five years in the Philippines, making translations into Ibanag. In 1992, they moved to Russia, working in Moscow, Makhachkala, and Krasnodar, then moved to Odessa, Ukraine. In 2009, they returned to the Philippines as translation consultants.
Keith and Grace have three children, Adam, Arwen, and Eden.
Publications
- The Internal Structure of Indonesian Roots (Nusa, 1985) was his two-volume doctoral dissertation at University of Michigan in 1983 before it was published two years later in Jakarta, Indonesia by the Universitas Katolik Indonesia Atma Jaya, as volumes 21 and 22 of their NUSA series.
- "The Tale of the Good Wife" (Cricket 26.11, July 1999, 27-31) is a retelling of a Kumyk folk tale from Dagestan, a province of Russia where McCune spent two years.
- The Rats of Hamelin (Moody Publishers, 2005) is a historical fantasy novel he coauthored with his son, Adam McCune. It is a retelling of the legend of the Pied Piper of Hamelin.[3][4][5]
Notes
- ^ Margaret Magnus. "What's in a Word?: Studies in Phonosemantics." (web page)
- ^ Moody Publishers. "Adam & Keith McCune Archived 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine." 2005. (web page)
- ^ " Most folks think that fairy tales are just for kids," Pittsburgh Post - Gazette. 1 November 2005.
- ^ YOUNG WRITER PUTS TWIST ON OLD STORY; 'Rats of Hamelin', The Post - Tribune, (Gary, Indiana,)] 3 October 2006.
- ^ Poetic duo look beyond tale in The Rats of Hamelin (Beacon Edition,) Ebert, Lisa Virginian - Pilot (Norfolk, Va,) 9 October 2005,