The Institute

A Novel

Hardcover, 561 pages

English language

Published Aug. 7, 2019 by Hodder & Stoughton.

ISBN:
978-1-5293-5539-0
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
1120189373

View on OpenLibrary

4 stars (69 reviews)

Deep in the woods of Maine, there is a dark state facility where kids, abducted from across the United States, are incarcerated. In the Institute they are subjected to a series of tests and procedures meant to combine their exceptional gifts - telepathy, telekinesis - for concentrated effect.

Luke Ellis is the latest recruit. He's just a regular 12-year-old, except he's not just smart, he's super-smart. And he has another gift which the Institute wants to use...

Far away in a small town in South Carolina, former cop Tim Jamieson has taken a job working for the local Sherrif. He's basically just walking the beat. But he's about to take on the biggest case of his career.

Back in the Institute's downtrodden playground and corridors where posters advertise 'just another day in paradise', Luke, his friend Kalisha and the other kids are in no doubt that they are prisoners, not …

17 editions

This was fun!

4 stars

Content warning Spoiling themes about the book, but not the actual plot.

Review of 'Institute' on 'Goodreads'

1 star

I guarantee you this: If this stream of badly written diarrhea had anybody else's name on the cover, this book would be one of those works everybody brings up to bond over how much of a shitfest it is. Rightfully so. The plot is entirely predictable. The characters are laughably cartoonish. I wish it was a sort of fun cartoonish that you find in bizarro fiction, but sadly, it is that sort of cartoonish one can only laugh at in hopes of forgetting one painful fact: This book was written by King. All this is bad enough, but for fucking love of everything holy and unholy, why, oh why, is this book so fucking long.

Review of 'The Institute' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars


In the dark all the shadows disappear

Another great Stephen King read. It made me laugh, it made me angry, it made me confused. But above all - it made me enjoy reading again.Stephen King can make improbable seem possible. The mixture of real work and fantastical is blended with great care, creating sort of “uncanny valley” feeling of “Maybe. Just maaaybe. It could happen?”.Kids getting abducted and carried away into an Institute to use their abilities for “good of the world”. And among them one with just a bit extra brains which might help him free all his new friends. If only he can get some help…







Review of 'The Institute' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

While looking up what a night knocker was to understand the first couple chapters, I found a comment that said this was an older story set in the 70s or 80s with random parts that felt copy pasted to make it fit into current day.

After reading, I don't have a doubt about that. There are a variety of weird disjointed bits that don't quite fit. I don't need to go into specifics. You'll know em when you read em.

And then there's the kids.

Stephen King is one of my favourite authors. But man... He cannot write children. He can't.

Although all of the young characters are likeable, they all speak like my mother wearing a sideways hat and an Adidas jumpsuit.

It's an okay book to pass the time, but won't be staying on my favorites shelf

Review of 'The Institute' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

This was a solid adventure story that moved along at a brisk pace. I was expecting something a bit more horror-tinged when I started reading it, but instead this was mostly a fantasy about terrible things happening to telepathic and telekinetic kids. This was also the closest King has come to a young adult novel since maybe Eyes of the Dragon, although it was fairly profane, so maybe that would disqualify it in some circles. King sticks the landing here, and I enjoyed it a lot.

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Subjects

  • American literature