Sangay Glass's Blog - Posts Tagged "killerthriller"

Flipping the Final Girl Trope: Candice Fights Back


She’s the last one standing, bloodied but breathing, outsmarting the killer just enough to survive. But Candice isn’t just surviving—she’s rewriting the script.

She was never prey.

Candice is serial killer bait, sure, but she’s also a strategist, a survivor, and a wildcard. The Adirondack wilderness isn’t just a setting—it’s a battlefield where deception, trauma, and sheer willpower collide. She’s not waiting for the monster to slip up—she’s playing the long game, letting him think he’s winning.

How far would you go to stop a monster?
How do trauma and survival shape identity?
And when justice isn’t an option… what do you choose?

This is the kind of story that flips the thriller genre on its head—where the so-called victim isn’t just running, she’s hunting.

If you love psychological thrillers, survival stories, or characters who walk the razor’s edge between justice and revenge, this one’s for you.

What’s your survival strategy? Drop your answer in the comments.

Would you survive in Candice's shoes?
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Stepping Into the Shadows: Understanding Trauma and Mental Illness Through Fiction

Fiction has an unparalleled ability to transport us into the minds of characters who see and experience the world in ways we may never fully understand. When it comes to trauma and mental illness, books can serve as a bridge—offering raw, intimate glimpses into struggles that often go unseen.

Characters shaped by trauma don’t always follow a predictable path. They’re not always likable. They make reckless decisions. They sabotage themselves. They push people away while secretly craving connection. But in their chaos, in their detachment or anger, there’s something deeply human—something that reflects real pain, survival, and the search for meaning in a world that doesn’t always make sense.

Reading these characters forces us to confront discomfort. What does it feel like to dissociate in the middle of a life-or-death situation? To view the world through the lens of hypervigilance? To detach from pain because it’s the only way to keep moving? Fiction allows us to step into those moments—not as a voyeur, but as someone walking beside them, feeling their pulse quicken, their decisions tighten, their emotions disconnect.

These characters challenge our perception of resilience. They force us to ask—what does survival really look like? Is it just breathing, just getting through another day? Or is it reclaiming control, rewriting the narrative, finding strength in the fractured pieces?

For readers, these stories offer more than entertainment. They offer understanding. Empathy. And sometimes, validation. They remind us that trauma doesn’t define a person—but it does shape them. That healing isn’t linear. That survival isn’t always about hope—it’s about endurance, wit, and sometimes just refusing to let the past have the final word.

By stepping into these minds, we don’t just witness trauma—we start to understand it. And maybe, just maybe, we see a reflection of our own strength staring back.

#What books have helped you see the world through a different mind?

Discover Candice's world of detachment, PTSD, and self-love as she braves the wilderness and three bears.
Ledge Pond
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