Sangay Glass's Blog - Posts Tagged "ethics"

What would you add to the list?


Some say wolves walk between worlds.
Not quite spirit, not quite flesh.

They know all the things we’ve forgotten—

How to grieve with the wind.
How to wait without fear.
How to leave no trace but change everything.

When they look at us, they don’t just see what we are.

They see what we could become.

This Summer:


We Were Meant to be Wolves

An psychological eco-thriller with a supernatural twist.

She crossed a line meant to protect the wolves— now
they own her body and soul.

Because sometimes the truth bites back—hard.
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Born to Be Wild: Wolves As Pets


Most wolves and wolfdogs aren’t surrendered because they’re dangerous.

They’re surrendered because they’re misunderstood.

They weren’t born broken.
They weren't born to be wild.
We just expect them to behave otherwise.

This theme runs deep in We Were Meant to Be Wolves, a story rooted in real-world wolf conservation, identity, and the blurry lines between what we love and what we fear.

If you’ve ever worked in rescue or fallen in love with something untamable—you’ll feel this one in your bones.

We Were Meant to Be Wolves to be released this summer.

If you're looking for something now, Ledge Pond is a psychological wilderness survival thriller. Available now. Please read the TWs though. It's wild.
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What if wolves returned to the Adirondacks?

What if wolves naturally expanded their territory into the Adirondacks?

Not in theory. Not in textbooks. But flesh and breath—moving through trees we thought were ours alone.

Some would call it progress. Others, a threat.

Jess, an ecologist studying a breeding pair in the Adirondacks, used to be on one side. Now she’s not so sure.

Because when wolves return, so do the questions:

Who gets to decide what belongs?

What do we owe the wild?

And what happens when we mistake fear for protection?

This theme runs deep in We Were Meant to Be Wolves—a story rooted in real-world conservation, identity, and the blurry lines between what we love and what we fear.

If you’ve ever worked in rescue… or fallen for something untamable—you’ll feel this one in your bones.

We Were Meant to Be Wolves — a psychological eco-thriller about wolves and the fine line between conservation and control that bites back. Coming this summer.

Craving a wilderness psycho-thriller with bite? Ledge Pond is available now.
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Jess Taylor on Wolves

We Were Meant to Be Wolves
Wolves don’t second-guess.
They don’t beg the forest to love them.
They live as they are—rough, graceful, necessary.
They carry no shame for the hunt,
no guilt for the kill.
And yet, they love fiercely,
mourn their dead,
and move like ghosts stitched into the land.
When I watch them, I remember:
The world doesn’t need us to be perfect.
It needs us to belong.
To find our place in the rhythm of things—
not above it, not apart from it,
but within it.
We were meant to be wild,
to feel the wind and not apologize,
to run toward what matters,
and let the rest fall away.
—Jess Taylor

Coming This Summer:

Jess Taylor's body lies rotting in the woods.

The man who killed her is still alive—and she’s still standing right beside him.

Ten years after surviving a wolf encounter that claimed her sister’s life, wildlife ecologist Jess returns to the field to study a newly discovered breeding pair in the Adirondacks.

But when she crosses the line between conservation and control, she pays for it—with her body and soul.
Now back from the dead—she’s disoriented, untethered, and not entirely human.

To uncover what happened, Jess must confront the research, the bribes, the betrayals… and the man who couldn’t save her—or stop her.

The Adirondack wilderness may not offer redemption.

But it just might spark an evolution.

This theme runs deep in We Were Meant to Be Wolves, a story rooted in real-world conservation, identity, and the blurry lines between what we love and what we fear.

If you’ve ever worked in rescue or fallen in love with something untamable—you’ll feel this one in your bones.
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Published on April 01, 2025 05:18 Tags: contemporary, eco, ecology, ethics, fiction, gray, grey, morally, psycholigical, survival, thriller, wilderness, wolf, wolves