Every story has a hero.
Every story has a villain.
But what happens when both live inside the same person?
Heroes & Villains: Inside Elijah’s Mind is a companion journal that takes readers deeper into the emotional world behind the story. Instead of simply continuing the narrative, this book opens the door to the thoughts Elijah never fully says out loud — the doubts, regrets, questions, and realizations that live between the chapters.
Throughout the Trilogy, Elijah struggles with identity, loyalty, love, and the consequences of the choices he’s made. From the outside, people see the story and decide who was right and who was wrong. But inside his mind, the lines aren’t that simple.
This journal explores the internal battle between the person Elijah tries to be and the person the world sometimes sees him as. Through raw reflections and personal entries, readers experience the moments of guilt, clarity, anger, and growth that shaped the journey.
Some entries confront mistakes that can’t be undone.
Some question whether redemption is even possible.
Others wrestle with the uncomfortable truth that being the hero in your own story might still make you the villain in someone else’s.
Inside Elijah’s Mind isn’t about perfect answers.
It’s about honesty.
It invites readers to slow down, reflect on the emotional weight behind the Trilogy, and confront a question that echoes throughout every chapter:
Are people truly heroes or villains…
or are we all just trying to survive the consequences of who we’ve been?
Every story has a hero.
Every story has a villain.
But what happens when both live inside the same person?
Heroes & Villains: Inside Elijah’s Mind is a companion journal that takes readers deeper into the emotional world behind the story. Instead of simply continuing the narrative, this book opens the door to the thoughts Elijah never fully says out loud — the doubts, regrets, questions, and realizations that live between the chapters.
Throughout the Trilogy, Elijah struggles with identity, loyalty, love, and the consequences of the choices he’s made. From the outside, people see the story and decide who was right and who was wrong. But inside his mind, the lines aren’t that simple.
This journal explores the internal battle between the person Elijah tries to be and the person the world sometimes sees him as. Through raw reflections and personal entries, readers experience the moments of guilt, clarity, anger, and growth that shaped the journey.
Some entries confront mistakes that can’t be undone.
Some question whether redemption is even possible.
Others wrestle with the uncomfortable truth that being the hero in your own story might still make you the villain in someone else’s.
Inside Elijah’s Mind isn’t about perfect answers.
It’s about honesty.
It invites readers to slow down, reflect on the emotional weight behind the Trilogy, and confront a question that echoes throughout every chapter:
Are people truly heroes or villains…
or are we all just trying to survive the consequences of who we’ve been?