Hamad Aloqayli
Software Engineer
About Me

Bachelor's degree in Software Engineering, College of Computer & Information Sciences - King Saud University with second class honors.
Frontend Software Engineer with 4+ years of experience building high-quality ReactJS applications across Tech, Startup, and
R&D sectors. Certified Agile Project Manager and IT Service Management Specialist, skilled in aligning technical execution with project goals using Scrum. Blending technical
expertise and strategic project management to deliver impactful software.
: A supernatural thriller where a forensic psychologist fights to prove her daughter's innocence in a murder case. Amazon.com
Sakshi C draws on real psychological concepts (repression, confabulation, and the misinformation effect) to show how memory is not a recording but a reconstruction. The novel asks: If you can’t trust your own mind, what can you trust? blind spot novel by sakshi c
Rudolph intends to use the inherited land for drug production, a dark secret that the narrator must eventually confront. Key Characters The Narrator: : A supernatural thriller where a forensic psychologist
Sakshi C’s prose is lean but evocative. She specializes in what could be called "quiet horror"—moments of normalcy punctuated by a single chilling detail. For example, a scene where Aasha is drinking tea with her fiancé becomes terrifying when she notices that his "alibi" coffee mug is still dry. The dialogue is sharp, realistic, and often layered with subtext. Rudolph intends to use the inherited land for
At first glance, Blind Spot presents itself as a classic psychological thriller. The story centers on a protagonist navigating a world where the lines between reality and perception are blurred. However, Sakshi C. uses the "blind spot" metaphor—the physiological area where the optic nerve passes through the retina—to explore the psychological "blind spots" we all possess: our biases, our repressed traumas, and the inconvenient truths we ignore to keep our lives intact.
, the novel is recognized for its ability to create immediate tension, though it contains mature themes and graphic depictions of psychological and physical dominance. Note on Similar Titles:
Without revealing the twist, the final third of the book transforms into a meditation on guilt. The “blind spot” becomes a defense mechanism—a psychological erasure of trauma. Sakshi C. handles this with sensitivity, never sensationalizing mental illness but instead portraying it as a hauntingly logical response to unbearable knowledge.
My Skills
Major Skills
: A supernatural thriller where a forensic psychologist fights to prove her daughter's innocence in a murder case. Amazon.com
Sakshi C draws on real psychological concepts (repression, confabulation, and the misinformation effect) to show how memory is not a recording but a reconstruction. The novel asks: If you can’t trust your own mind, what can you trust?
Rudolph intends to use the inherited land for drug production, a dark secret that the narrator must eventually confront. Key Characters The Narrator:
Sakshi C’s prose is lean but evocative. She specializes in what could be called "quiet horror"—moments of normalcy punctuated by a single chilling detail. For example, a scene where Aasha is drinking tea with her fiancé becomes terrifying when she notices that his "alibi" coffee mug is still dry. The dialogue is sharp, realistic, and often layered with subtext.
At first glance, Blind Spot presents itself as a classic psychological thriller. The story centers on a protagonist navigating a world where the lines between reality and perception are blurred. However, Sakshi C. uses the "blind spot" metaphor—the physiological area where the optic nerve passes through the retina—to explore the psychological "blind spots" we all possess: our biases, our repressed traumas, and the inconvenient truths we ignore to keep our lives intact.
, the novel is recognized for its ability to create immediate tension, though it contains mature themes and graphic depictions of psychological and physical dominance. Note on Similar Titles:
Without revealing the twist, the final third of the book transforms into a meditation on guilt. The “blind spot” becomes a defense mechanism—a psychological erasure of trauma. Sakshi C. handles this with sensitivity, never sensationalizing mental illness but instead portraying it as a hauntingly logical response to unbearable knowledge.