Sunday, May 10, 2026

Showcase of First Daughter by Marlie Parker Wasserman and a Giveaway of a $10 USA Amazon Gift Card

FIRST DAUGHTER by Marlie P Wasserman Banner

FIRST DAUGHTER

by Marlie Parker Wasserman

May 4-29, 2026 

Virtual Book Tour

Synopsis:

In the summer of 1895, President Grover Cleveland and his pregnant wife, Frances, retreat to their secluded Cape Cod home, eager to avoid Washington’s heat and hassles. The very day that Frances gives birth, their three-year-old daughter vanishes. A ransom note surfaces, demanding a mysterious and peculiar sum.

Is the kidnapper a political enemy or someone closer to home? Secret service agents chase multiple leads but reach dead ends. Desperate, Frances Cleveland searches for answers on her own. As the hunt continues, the kidnapper carefully plots each move and determines to settle a score.

FIRST DAUGHTER by Marlie P Wasserman

The historical record documents threats against the Clevelands, but no actual kidnapping. Yet, what if the president and his wife, known for keeping secrets, concealed a terrifying chapter of their lives? In this gripping blend of fact and fiction, the line between public duty and private anguish blurs in a mother’s fight to save her child.

Praise for First Daughter:

"Arresting, brilliant, emotional! Marlie Wasserman's First Daughter had me hooked from the very first page. Like her other works, fact and fiction are delightfully blurred by the fantastic level of historical detail, creating an exhilarating ride through the kidnapping of President Grover Cleveland's first child and his obscure misdeeds."
~ Jane L. Rubin, author of the award-winning Gilded City series

"In this masterfully woven historical thriller, the past comes alive with rich detail and taut suspense. In the summer of 1895, President Grover Cleveland and his wife retreat to their Cape Cod estate, seeking respite from political turmoil-until their three-year-old daughter vanishes. A ransom note surfaces, but is the culprit a political enemy or someone in their household? Seamlessly blending fact and fiction, this novel delivers a riveting tale of betrayal, resilience, and a mother's relentless quest for truth."
~ Maryka Biaggio, award-winning author of Gun Girl and the Tall Guy and The Model Spy

"A parent's worst nightmare unfolds for President and Frances Cleveland - their daughter is kidnapped. And no one knows why she was taken. The real motive behind the kidnapping may lie closer to home than anyone dares to imagine. First Daughter is a thrilling tale that clutches your heart and won't let go. This haunting historical mystery steeped in vivid period detail explores the cost of secrets and the burden of public life, wrapped in a mother's relentless instinct to protect her family-no matter the consequences."
~ JF Tanner, author of The King's Collar

"Grabbed from the very first page, Wasserman's tale of the abduction of President Grover Cleveland's young daughter Ruth (Baby Ruth) delivers Gilded Age details, tense characters and no bigger problem than a child in danger. With the deftly structured combination of Frances Cleveland's determination to bring justice to her family and a parallel hard luck tale, readers will forget this is non-fiction."
~ Chris Keefer, author of Find Your Way to My Grave a Carrie Lisbon Mystery

"First Daughter is an intriguing and intricately-plotted historical mystery novel. I loved the depth of research and the evocative setting of President Grover Cleveland's summerhouse Gray Gables at Buzzards Bay. I look forward to reading more from Marlie Parker Wasserman."
~ Margo Laurie, author of The Anarchist's Wife 

Book Details:

Genre: Historical Crime Fiction
Published by: Level Best Books
Publication Date: April 14, 2026
Number of Pages: 324
Book Links: Amazon | Kindle | Barnes & Noble | BookShop.org | Goodreads | BookBub

Read an excerpt:

At the western edge of Cape Cod, in the grandest bedroom in the sprawling residence known as Gray Gables, Frances Cleveland couldn’t stifle the rising sound of her own screams. Between pains, she rested. The late morning breeze drifted across the lawn from Buzzards Bay, fluttering the lace curtain and cooling the sweat on her forehead.

Even at this moment, Frances felt grateful that Grover chose to spend summers away from Washington’s heat, away from the prying public. Here, in this secluded haven, she needn’t fear strangers hovering near the windows of the Executive Mansion for a glimpse of their president—or, more likely, of his wife and daughters. She could concentrate her fears on her pains and pray for the safe birth of her third child, in the same way she had for her first and again for her second. Frances expected from experience that her suffering would soon recede, replaced by the joy of motherhood. She did not know that before the day was over, her bodily misery would end, yielding not to joy but to overwhelming terror.

The previous February, after sensing a flutter beneath her gown while greeting a crowd of visitors at a reception, Frances guessed the baby would be her third girl. Practiced at keeping confidences, she never mentioned her prediction to her preoccupied husband. When she gave birth to another girl, the blathering journalists would have their say. They would try out their jokes about the president’s little harem. Most days, Frances ignored the journalists. Most days, she trusted Grover to love each of his babies.

The image of a trio of girls was far from Frances’s mind now, as she suffered in bed. She cried out, too loudly. Dr. Bryant reminded her that she’d survived labor pains before. “Don’t you dare say that again,” she said, in a shrill tone that surprised her.

At last, Frances heard the newborn’s cry, faint but lovely. Dr. Bryant chuckled while he clamped and cut the cord. “Mrs. Cleveland, should I bring the president upstairs to see his new daughter? He’s pacing on the front porch. Once he sees this one—she’s beautiful—he won’t regret it’s not a son.”

“Yes,” Frances said, with the strongest voice she could muster. A girl, as she’d guessed. For an instant, with the last of her contractions, she’d ignored her prediction and hoped for a boy. Now, she didn’t linger on that momentary weakness of character. She let a surge of pride swell over her, above the exhaustion. She’d done it. Again.

Frances turned to the local midwife hired to assist. “Tell the steward, his name is Sinclair, to get Ruth and Esther. I want my daughters to see their new sister.”

Frances raised herself a few inches, enough to see the midwife slip into the hall. The woman returned and gave Frances a nod. The girls would come shortly. Frances sank back and watched the midwife wipe down the infant and swaddle her. She did look beautiful. “Here,” Frances said, crooking her arm to make room for Marion, the name Grover chose that would serve for a girl or a boy. The same name as a town across Buzzards Bay, where many of their friends lived. Frances appreciated Grover’s decision to buy an estate on the outskirts of a different but nearby town, Bourne. The family could escape Washington’s heat and busybodies.

And escape the threats.

Hours earlier, Frances gave thanks for the breeze blowing through the open window, reminding her that Gray Gables was perfectly located on a point overlooking the Bay’s east side. But now she blocked the sound of wind and waves. straining to make sense of other sounds, to hear what Grover would say about a third daughter. The doctor scurried downstairs. The midwife remained stationed over the bed, tending to Frances and crooning softly to the baby. Frances ignored the woman, mindful only of the voices wafting in through the window. First, low tones as the doctor talked to Grover. They were friends. Dr. Bryant saved Grover’s life two summers ago, removing the cancer eating away at his palate. Now, Frances imagined the doctor patting her thickset husband on his shoulder and shaking his hand. She hoped Grover would offer the doctor a contented smile. Seconds later, Grover clomped upstairs. The doctor followed behind, with lighter steps.

“So happy, Frankie.” Her husband used one of her nicknames. After their wedding, she asked Grover to call her by her more dignified name, Frances. He still used Frankie or Frank in private moments. She let him—the nicknames added tenderness to his gruff voice. “The doctor tells me you’re fine. You managed without chloroform this time, too. And the baby’s healthy. Marion, right? Three girls. They will enjoy each other’s company.”

He said the right thing. She didn’t need to feel anxious about another girl. He was a good man, kind to her, whatever others thought. He wouldn’t hold the baby, rarely did. But he wiped his chubby hand on a cloth, then touched Marion’s forehead. He stood there for a few minutes, cherishing their third child. For him, it was a fourth, but no matter. His eyes shifted to gaze at her. He wouldn’t see the tall, slender belle he married nine years ago, the one the reporters called lovely. He’d see a tired, sweat-drenched woman who looked every day of her thirty years.

“Ruth and Esther?” Frances asked again, eyeing the midwife. “Did you send Sinclair for them?”

“Yes, ma’am. The steward went a minute ago.” The midwife spoke quietly, carefully. She’d feel nervous in the presence of the president.

Still almost flat in bed, Frances clutched Marion, admiring the infant. Perfect features. Ten fingers and ten toes. Another blessing from God.

A familiar sound at the door. Sinclair knocked softly. His usual pattern—soft, loud, soft—keeping to the household code. Another sound, when the midwife opened the door. Next, Frances would hear four little feet rushing toward the newest baby.

No feet. Only hushed words.

“Sinclair found Annie,” the midwife said. “She’s your older daughter’s nursemaid, right? He tells me she needs another minute to bring Ruth and to tell your younger daughter’s nursemaid to bring Esther.” The midwife stood far from Frances’s bed, speaking almost in a whisper.

Grover didn’t look concerned. His rough mustache skimmed Frances’s cheek as he kissed her lightly on her damp forehead. She was too tired to return the kiss. She heard him drop into the nearby rocking chair.

“Joseph,” he said, addressing the doctor, “you’re certain Frankie is fine? No complications?”

“Just fine, Grover. Ready for the next one before long.”

Four years earlier, when Ruth was born, Dr. Joseph Bryant told Frances how to manage her family. “Breastfeed for six months.” He looked straight at her, with no awkwardness. “You’ll not get in the family way, and the baby will stay healthy. After six months, well, you and Grover can proceed to another.” And so they had. Esther after Ruth. Marion after Esther. A daughter every two years.

Frances closed her eyes, relying on her ears. Dr. Bryant thanked the midwife for her assistance. The woman tidied up, gathering soiled sheets and opening a chest, hunting for fresh linens. The room went silent, except for the soft, repetitious squeak of the rocking chair. Grover leaned up, then back, up then back. Frances sensed herself drifting off.

Another soft knock, barely a sound, followed by a pause, and two more soft knocks. Not Sinclair. One of the nursemaids. Annie? The midwife opened the door. “Ma’am.” Annie’s voice came out as a croak. “I can’t find Ruth.”

***

Excerpt from FIRST DAUGHTER by Marlie Parker Wasserman. Copyright 2026 by Marlie Parker Wasserman. Reproduced with permission from Marlie Parker Wasserman. All rights reserved.

 

Author Bio:

Marlie Parker Wasserman

Marlie Parker Wasserman loves writing historical crime fiction. She has published three novels--First Daughter will be her fourth. After a career in publishing in New Jersey, she moved to Chapel Hill, NC with her husband. When she is not writing, she travels, reads, and sketches. One of her goals is to visit every national park in the U.S., and she is close to her goal.

Catch Up With Marlie Parker Wasserman:

www.marliewasserman.com
Amazon Author Profile
Goodreads
BookBub - @marliewasserman
Instagram - @marliepwasserman
Bluesky - @marliewasserman.bsky.social
Facebook

 

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Spotlight of Liar's Dice by Juliet Faithfull


PHOTO SOURCE:

TYPORAMA

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LIAR'S DICE

JULIET FAITHFULL
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ALL INFORMATION IN THIS POST IS COURTESY OF JORDAN FORNEY | MARKETING MANAGER | PENGUIN RANDOM HOUSE | RANDOM HOUSE | DIAL PRESS | BBD AND THE PUBLISHER'S WEBSITE
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An astonishing debut about a teenage girl in 1970s Brazil who is torn away from her twin sister—and who must learn what it means to fight for those she loves when all the odds are stacked against her.


Tender, suspenseful, and full of emotional depth, LIAR'S DICE is a powerful story of sisterhood, secrecy, and resilience set in 1970s Brazil under military dictatorship. 

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April 28, 2026

Random House

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PRAISE FOR LIAR'S DICE:

“Pitch-perfect and full of heart, with language so evocative you can feel the heat of the summer and hear the rattle of gambling dice and envision the flash of sequins as the girls dance, for the last time, as a twosome.”—Jodi Picoult, #1 New York Times bestselling author of By Any Other Name

“A tender, unforgettable tale that sings across time and vaults over lies and delivers a reader to the places they need to be.”—Junot Díaz, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao

“An unsettling and beautifully written story about a family wrestling with truth, loss, and their place in the world.”Florence Knapp, New York Times bestselling author of The Names

“Juliet Faithfull holds her characters so gently, never losing sight of the love and hard-won forgiveness at the center of their lives.”—Lauren Fox, New York Times bestselling author of Send for Me

“I hesitate to call anything this beautiful ‘magic.’ It’s more than that; it’s a sacred healing. Faithfull is a master storyteller and visionary. She has captured a story to heal our own hearts in these uncertain times.”—Sandra Cisneros, bestselling author of The House on Mango Street

“A story of girls bound by an unspoken rhythm, of love that endures exile and betrayal, of one heart beating for two across oceans and shadows . . . a magnificent debut.”—Jamie Ford, New York Times bestselling author of The Many Daughters of Afong Moy

“Juliet Faithfull is a tremendously gifted writer, and with her debut novel, she aims for the sky and she doesn’t miss.”—Annie Hartnett, bestselling author of The Road to Tender Hearts

“A nuanced exploration of family dynamics, sisterhood, and the search for belonging.”—Charmaine Wilkerson, New York Times bestselling author of Black Cake and Good Dirt

“Both intimate and expansive, Liar’s Dice sets the enduring relationship of separated twins Dolores and Mita against the fraught political backdrop of 1970s Brazil. Written with extraordinary compassion and insight, it is an immersive coming-of-age story that reveals the wild depths of the human heart.”—Frances de Pontes Peebles, author of The Air You Breathe

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ABOUT LIAR'S DICE:

Dolores and Mita grow up in rural Brazil, identical and inseparable. But Mita develops a mysterious illness that challenges the family. One day, Dolores wakes up to find her sister gone—sent to a hospital in their father’s native London. There is no Dolores without Mita. And now Mita is gone.


When the family moves to Rio, Dolores’ parents act as if Mita never existed. Lonely and grief-stricken, Dolores struggles to learn to read and write at the stodgy British School—until she meets Andrea, a headstrong, streetwise girl from the dangerous part of town. Andrea shows Dolores a new side of Rio—and how to survive it. As the dictatorship cracks down on dissenters, and people disappear, Dolores begins to wonder if her sister is dead, and her parents are lying. Determined to uncover the truth, Dolores is willing to do whatever it takes—lie, gamble and steal—to get her sister back.


Liar’s Dice captures the precarious intensity of coming of age in a volatile time—when repression and silence are the fabric of everyday life—and the cost of family secrets. Heartrending and tender, Juliet Faithfull’s debut novel is a testament to the unbreakable bonds of sisterhood.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR:



Photo Credit:  Photo: © Sharona Jacobs


JULIET FAITHFULL is a Spanish-British-American writer who grew up in Brazil.


Liar’s Dice, her first novel, was a winner of the 2024 Irish Writers Centre’s Novel Fair and a semifinalist for the James Jones First Novel Fellowship.


She was awarded a Pauline Scheer Fellowship by GrubStreet’s Novel Incubator program and her short stories have been published in the Bellevue Literary Review and Urbanus Magazine.


A graduate of Harvard University and Smith College School for Social Work, Juliet works as a trilingual psychotherapist and currently lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts, with her two sons.

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FIND THE AUTHOR AT THE LINKS BELOW:




This Week At Silver's Reviews



Oh what a good week to stop by!!

Hope to see you.



Saturday, May 9, 2026

Spotlight of The Parisian Chapter by Janet Skeslien Charles


PHOTO SOURCE:

TYPORAMA

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THE PARISIAN CHAPTER


JANET SKESLIEN CHARLES
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ALL INFORMATION IN THIS POST IS COURTESY OF DAYNA JOHNSON |SENIOR MARKETING MANAGER | ATRIA BOOKS | SIMON & SCHUSTER | AND THE PUBLISHER'S WEBSITE
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From the New York Times bestselling author of The Paris Library and Miss Morgan’s Book Brigade, THE PARISIAN CHAPTER is a charming and cinematic novel following a young woman from Montana who takes a job in the American Library in Paris, where she discovers the power of storytelling and her own dreams.

Janet Skeslien Charles has penned another beautiful piece of fiction - this time part literary and part historical.

"I was immediately whisked away to the streets of Paris. And if you've read her previous novel THE PARIS LIBRARY, you'll find lots of lovely easter eggs here." - From the e-mail from Dayna Johnson
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May 5, 2026
Atria Books
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PRAISE FOR THE PARISIAN CHAPTER:

“A delightful love letter to the glorious American Library in Paris. If you love Paris, don't hesitate to say 'Oui oui!' to this sparkling, heartfelt ode to libraries—and to the people who make them magical.” —Kristen Harmel, New York Times bestselling author of Meet Me in Paris

“A colorful tapestry shot through with themes of friendship, the power of books, the importance of history, and the joys and trials of an artist’s life. It’s told with charm and flair and filled with genuine joie de vivre. Francophiles, bibliophiles, and anyone who enjoys an engaging story with memorable characters will be delighted.” Library Journal

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ABOUT THE PARISIAN CHAPTER:

Paris, 1995: It’s been five years since Lily Jacobsen and her best friend Mary Louise arrived in Paris from their small town of Froid, Montana. Determined to establish themselves as artists—Lily, a novelist, and Mary Louise, a painter—they share a tiny walkup and survive on brie and baguettes.

When Mary Louise abruptly moves out, Lily feels alone in the city of light for the first time and must find a new way to support herself. She lands a job as a programs manager at the American Library in Paris, following in the footsteps of Odile, her beloved French neighbor in Montana who told her stories of heroic World War II librarians when Lily was growing up.

Here in the storied halls of the ALP, she meets an incredible cast of characters—her favorite author, quirky coworkers, broke students, trailing spouses, haughty trustees, and devoted volunteers—each with their own stories... and agendas. Lily often seeks solace in the Afterlife, the library’s attic that’s home to hundreds of unpublished manuscripts, and there, she discovers a box of archives that may be a link to the past: to Odile’s own Parisian chapter.

This moving, propulsive story offers a panoramic view of a real historic institution, and revisits characters from both of Janet Skeslien Charles’s beloved novels. Lily’s story is a love letter to the artist’s life, friendship, and leaving home only to find it again.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR:



Photo Credit:  Krystal Kenney

Janet Skeslien Charles is the New York Times and internationally bestselling author of The Paris Library.

Her work has been translated into thirty-seven languages. She has spent a decade researching Jessie Carson (Miss Morgan’s Book Brigade) at The Morgan Library, the NYPL, and archives across France.

Her shorter work has appeared in the Chicago Tribune, The Sydney Morning HeraldLitHub, and the anthology Montana Noir
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FIND THE AUTHOR AT THE LINK BELOW:





Friday, May 8, 2026

Spotlight of Never Hide From The Devil by N.T. McQueen


PHOTO SOURCE:

TYPORAMA

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NEVER HIDE FROM THE DEVIL


N.T. MCQUEEN
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ALL INFORMATION IN THIS POST IS COURTESY OF THE AUTHOR.
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Inspired by a true story of resistance during the Armenian Genocide, this stirring coming-of-age novel is a parable of courage and impossible choices in the midst of unimaginable horror.

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May 5, 2026
Cynren Press
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Historical / Military & Wars
Social Themes / Prejudice & Racism
Coming of Age
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PRAISE FOR NEVER HIDE FROM THE DEVIL:

Never Hide from the Devil is not merely a historical reconstruction; it is a jagged piece of shrapnel from 1915 Van, pulsing with the frantic, localized energy of a city under siege.—The Armenian Weekly

Vividly written, this moving story reminds us that resistance against tyranny and oppression is possible. Costs may be high, but courage can prevail. A real tour de force!—Ronald Grigor Suny, William H. Sewell, Jr. Distinguished University Professor Emeritus of History, The University of Michigan

The horrors perpetrators commit are only half the story of genocide. The other half is the resistance of its victims. N.T. McQueen delivers a powerful novel of courage and defiance in the face of annihilation.—Dr. Khatchig Mouradian, Columbia University, author of The Resistance Network

Written with short and compelling chapters, this novel plunges the reader with authenticity into this little-known act of defiance during the 20th century’s first genocide.—Marsha Skrypuch, author of Making Bombs for Hitler and the Kidnapped from Ukraine trilogy

Through the eyes of a young boy, McQueen crafts a devastating and unforgettable portrait of the 1915 Defense of Van—a story of resilience against impossible odds that delivers the history of the Armenian Genocide to a new generation.—Eric Z. Weintraub, author of South of Sepharad

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ABOUT NEVER HIDE FROM THE DEVIL:

The government wants them dead.

Fourteen-year-old Suren Simonian, an Armenian, lives as most boys his age do in the city of Van, eastern Anatolia. He goes to school, gawks at boys’ fistfights, and does his best to avoid the Turkish gendarmes. Most days he spends with his Turkish best friend, Hamza.

But in spring 1915, rumors spread through Van of Turkish massacres of Armenian villages.

Now Turkish troops have massed outside Van with one goal—to exterminate the city’s Armenians.

As Suren struggles to understand what it means to be a man, he knows one thing for sure:

When everything you’ve known and loved is at stake, the only answer is to fight back. You can never hide from the devil.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR:


N.T. McQueen is an avid writer and dedicated college lecturer. 


With a master’s degree in fiction from California State University, Sacramento, McQueen has brought unique perspectives on human nature to readers in his captivating novels Never Hide from the Devil Devil (Cennan, 2026), The Cry of Dry Bones (2021), and Between Lions and Lambs (2011).


His writing has been featured in North American Review, Stonecoast Review, Entropy, Sunlight Press, Atticus Review, Dappled Things, Grief Digest Magazine, and Foreword Magazine.


He lives in California with his wife and daughters and enjoys fishing, traveling, and a tasty cup of coffee.

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FIND THE AUTHOR AT THE LINKS BELOW:




Book Blogger Hop - 5/8/2026

                                        

Question of the Week:

If you designed a cover for a beloved book, how would it look, and how would it reflect the story? (submitted by Billy @ Coffee-Addicted Writer) 

My Answer:

It would reflect the beauty of what's inside and be pretty colorful.

Covers draw me in so I would want this cover to be one that pulls readers in.

Friendly Fill-Ins - 5/8/2026

                                                    

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FRIENDLY FILL-INS:

1. I know I am having a good day when ________.

2. I _______when I am ___________.

3. _________ makes me feel helpless.

4. I have a lot of confidence in my ability to _________.

MY ANSWERS:

1.  I know I am having a good day when I wake up and see the sunshine which means I can spend some time outside.

2.  I love when I am reading.

3.  Carpentery skills make me feel helpless.

4.  I have a lot of confidence in my ability to knowing I am perfect about my grammar.