If Black Mirror, The Handmaid’s Tale, and a crime thriller walked into a bar and brewed a social commentary cocktail, Stigma would be the result. Mark P. Haskins' speculative debut delivers a hauntingly plausible tale where glowing letters float above people’s heads branding them with secrets they never asked to have exposed. Orwellian? Yes. Chillingly relevant? Also yes.
Imagine waking up one day with a glowing red letter floating above your head, broadcasting your darkest secret to the world. That’s the eerie premise of Stigma, a genre-bending thriller that’s equal parts dystopia, crime drama, and gut-punching social commentary.
The story kicks off with eerie sightings aboard a plane, and from there, the narrative snowballs into a full-blown societal meltdown. At its core is Rachel, a former lawyer turned women’s shelter founder, whose personal trauma intersects with the mysterious appearance of the stigmatic letters. What follows is a deftly plotted thriller with a conscience blending suspense, social critique, and psychological tension with the finesse of a seasoned author.
Haskins excels at capturing the quiet desperation of his characters, particularly Rachel, whose inner battle is equal parts brutal and inspiring. He doesn’t shy away from sensitive themes; misogyny, race, abuse, media sensationalism but instead weaves them into something that is both gripping and uncomfortably real. The sci-fi premise never overpowers the very human drama at the centre. It just happens to glow a threatening red.
Some scenes may be hard to stomach, graphic content is handled unflinchingly yet it serves the narrative's intent: to provoke, to challenge, to hold up a mirror. Yes, it juggles a lot multiple POVs, social critique, a sprinkle of sci-fi but somehow, it works. The pacing occasionally stutters, but the payoff is worth it. Think The Scarlet Letter meets Minority Report, but make it British, modern, and unapologetically fierce.
By the end, you're left asking: what if our worst secrets weren’t secret at all? Would society collapse… or finally evolve? Highly recommend to fans of thought-provoking thrillers who like their fiction dark, their themes timely, and their moral dilemmas disturbingly relatable.
Verdict: Stigma isn’t just a thriller; it’s a philosophical slap in the face about the labels society pins on people. Clever, bold, and devastatingly timely, it forces readers to ask: if our worst traits were visible for all to see, would we change or just hide better?
4.5 out of 5 glowing red letters.