Born
Linda McNear, near the Smoky Mountains in Alcoa, Tennessee, she lives
in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania where she is the Official Storyteller
of the city.
A pioneer and one of the leading experts in contemporary
storytelling, Linda and Mary Carter-Smith are the founders of "In
the Tradition.." National Black Storytelling Festival and Conference.
She was the Director for the festival when it came to Philadelphia
in 1984. Linda Goss is also the co-founder of The National Association
of Black Storytellers, Inc. (NABS). She was the first president of
NABS (1984-1991). She is a founding member of Keepers of the Culture,
an affiliate of NABS. She is also a founding member of Patchwork:
A Storytelling Guild.
She is co-author, along with her husband, Clay Goss,
of The Baby Leopard book and cassette tape. They are also authors
of It's Kwanzaa Time and Jump Up and Say, an anthology of African-American
Storytelling. She is co-author of Talk that Talk which was selected
by the Book of the Month Club's Quality Paper Back Division. Talk
that Talk was selected by Publishers Weekly as one of the best paperback
of 1990. She is the author of The Frog Who Wanted to be a Singer and
several stories, The Tree of Love, The Ghost Hunt, and Rabbit at the
Waterhole.
Linda has performed throughout the United States and
in Canada, including at The National Storytelling Festival in Jonesborough,
Tennessee, She has appeared on The Today Show and has been featured
in The New York times, Washington Post, Philadelphia Inquirer, Essence
Magazine and also on the covers of Learning Magazine and American
Visions. "Linda Goss Day" has been proclaimed by the Mayor
of Washington, D.C. and by the Mayor of Alcoa, Tennessee.
The Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh has sponsored the
"Linda Goss Program" throughout the Pittsburgh community.
She is a recording artist on Folksways Records. She has created, directed,
and produced "Unknown Ancestors", a Pan-African ritual that
focuses on familiy unity and heritage, and "River Mama",
an anthology of folk tales with music, song, and dance.
Linda has performed "River Mama" with the
Shona Sharif African-American Dance Ensemble. She made her debut with
the Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra in 1998. She developed Dreamstory
for the New Jersey Chamber Music Society and has toured with them
throughout the Delaware Valley. The NJ Chamber Music Society commissioned
composer/jazz artist Paul Arslanian and Linda to develop her story,
The Frog Who Wanted to be a Singer into a musical tale which will
be performed in the 2000 and 2001 season. Linda and vocalist/composer
Lynn Miller have created Wake Up Imagination, audience participation
programs and workshops which involve all ages in song, storytelling,
and movement. Together, they have performed throughout the Pennsylvania
and New Jersey areas.
Linda holds both an undergraduate and a Masters degree.
She is a member of Zeta Phi Beta sorority. She and her husband, playwright
Clay Goss, have three children