Author: Cynthia MacGregor

Home / Cynthia MacGregor
Post

Share and Share Alike

I’m sure your mother pounded the sharing ethos into your head like my mother did into mine, but sharing is good in adult situations too and not just when another kid wants to play with your toy or when you have a friend over and you have some candy or other goodies.

Post

A Book Windfall

I read something online recently that intrigued me. Some fellow—if I ever caught his name (and I doubt it) I surely don’t remember it now (but God bless him)—has appointed himself a one-person volunteer bookmobile. He is emptying out his personal library and leaving huge stacks of books in public places (e.g. Grand Central Terminal,...

Post

Affordable Adventures

What’s that you say? You’re longing to take a trip abroad to see the sights in distant lands, but it isn’t in your budget? Or you’re eager to learn about something new, but there aren’t any TED talks scheduled for your locality, and a dry lecture on the drier Sahara, the only talk that is...

Post

Cynthia To All Pilots: Land Immediately

Although I write for both adults and kids, most of the book-readings I do are kids’ books, both to audiences of pre-schoolers and to audiences of school-age kids in after-school care. My usual M.O. is to bring with me small slips of paper on which I have printed the book’s title, the publisher’s website, and...

Post

For Better Understanding

Roundtable/Great Reads is on the cusp of publishing—may have already published, by the time you read this—a book called Passover, which teaches kids about the Jewish holiday of the same name. I didn’t intend it to be read only by Jewish kids. When I was a teenager—which was a very long time ago!—I joined an...

Let’s Hear It For Comic Books!
Post

Let’s Hear It For Comic Books!

When I was a kid, parents and teachers alike decried kids’ reading comic books, asserting that they weren’t “real” books, that kids couldn’t learn from them, that they were “lazy reading,” and more. My own parents didn’t give me any grief about the comic books I read—mainly Little Lulu, Nancy, Henry, and Donald Duck—because I...

Throw The Book At Him
Post

Throw The Book At Him

When a judge is being urged to give a convicted criminal the harshest sentence possible, he or she is urged to “Throw the book at him/her.” I say we should ALL “throw books” at people—only, don’t literally THROW the books—please—just GIVE them, gently. Books are wonderful gifts—for any occasion or no occasion at all.

It Just Isn’t Done
Post

It Just Isn’t Done

When I was a kid, my aspirations for my future ran to having a Broadway career. As much as I loved writing and was forever composing poems and such, I was sure my future would be on stage. This may help explain why, at around nine years old, I one day decided out of the...

Linkletter Was Right
Post

Linkletter Was Right

Popular TV host Art Linkletter, an icon of afternoon TV in the middle of the last century, had a segment on his show in which he interviewed kids on various topics…and the responses they gave ranged from amazing to hilarious. This led to his compiling some of the best of them in a book he...

Another “Muscle” Your Kids Need To Exercise
Post

Another “Muscle” Your Kids Need To Exercise

No, it’s not really a muscle, but the imagination needs to be exercised regularly just as if it were. And your child’s (grandchild’s, godchild’s) imagination needs to grow and thrive even if he/she has no aspirations to be a writer or anything else in the creative field.