Education
McDonald was educated at Methodist College, Belfast, and University College, Oxford.
McDonald was educated at Methodist College, Belfast, and University College, Oxford.
He holds the post of Christopher Tower Student and Tutor in in the English Language at Christ Church, a college of the University of Oxford (and where the term "Student" is used for what elsewhere would be termed a "Fellow"). His first published poems were collected in the book Trio 3 (Blackstaff Press, 1982), and he was publishing poems in the national literary press while still an undergraduate. In 1986, he was selected as one of the six writers (including Jo Shapcott and Adam Thorpe) featured in New Chatto Poets.
His first full collection of poems, Biting the Wax, was published in 1989.
He was Fellow and Tutor in English at Pembroke College, Cambridge from 1988-1992, and was Lecturer (subsequently Reader) in English at the University of Bristol from 1992-1999. In 1999, he became the first holder of the Christopher Tower Studentship and Tutorship in in the English Language at Christ Church, Oxford, also holding a lectureship in the English Faculty of Oxford University.
In 1991, McDonald published Louis MacNeice: The Poet in his Contexts, and his critical and academic work on that poet has continued with his coedited Selected Plays of Louis MacNeice, and a number of articles He has re-edited, for Faber and Faber, MacNeice"s Collected Poems.
More generally, he has been a prolific critic of modern and contemporary poetry, writing both for the national press in Britain and Ireland, and for poetry journals, such as Review, PN Review, Thumbscrew and Metre.
His book Mistaken Identities: and Northern Ireland discusses poets such as Seamus Heaney, Michael Longley and Paul Muldoon. More recently, in Serious: Form and Authority from Yeats to Hill, he has challenged contemporary views of poetry and personality with new readings of Yeats, West. H. Auden, T. South. Eliot and Geoffrey Hill. McDonald"s second collection of poetry was Adam"s Dream (1996).
A third, Pastorals, was published by Carcanet in 2004.
And a fourth, The House of Clay, appeared from Carcanet in 2007. (with Johnston Kirkpatrick and Trevor McMahon) Trio 3, (1982, Blackstaff Press, ).