Rotten Tommy by David Sodergren
David Sodergren’s Rotten Tommy is a masterclass in modern horror—gritty, atmospheric, and deeply human. From the first page, Sodergren establishes an unshakable sense of unease. The dread doesn’t come only from violence or shock, but from the slow, creeping tension that lingers in every scene. His pacing and vivid imagery create a constant feeling that something terrible is about to happen, even in moments of calm.
The setting plays a crucial role in shaping the horror. The small-town isolation amplifies the fear, making readers feel trapped alongside the characters. Every darkened corner and quiet moment becomes a relationship reminder that evil can thrive in familiar places. This setting isn’t just a backdrop—it’s a living, breathing extension of the story’s anxiety and decay.
Sodergren also masterfully blends tones of suspense, tragedy, and dark humor. When the tension becomes unbearable, he inserts moments that are unsettlingly funny or ironic, forcing readers to question whether they should laugh or look away. The characters’ responses to fear and danger feel painfully real—driven by desperation, guilt, and survival instincts rather than heroism.
“Rotten Tommy” himself becomes more than just a name or a figure of horror. To the people around him, he represents a haunting embodiment of what happens when cruelty festers unchecked—a mirror reflecting the community’s hidden sins and collective guilt. As a reader, I found Tommy to be both horrifying and deeply tragic, symbolizing the ways society creates its own monsters.
Several characters inspire empathy despite their flaws. Sodergren writes them with nuance—people doing terrible things for reasons that feel painfully human. It’s impossible not to see parts of ourselves in their fear, shame, or need for redemption.
The story’s central themes—trauma, revenge, decay, and the cycle of cruelty—run deep. Through horror, Sodergren explores the darker side of human nature, showing how fear and guilt can twist people beyond recognition. Beneath the blood and brutality, the novel asks what happens when pain is ignored for too long, and whether forgiveness is ever truly possible.
Symbolically, Rotten Tommy addresses real-world issues: how communities turn away from the broken, how cruelty can be inherited, and how the line between victim and villain blurs when empathy is absent. The horror feels both literal and metaphorical—a mirror held up to the parts of humanity we’d rather not see.
Sodergren doesn’t just tell a story; he builds an experience—one that crawls under your skin and lingers long after you close the book. And remember… keep the door locked, night and day.