King does an excellent job of taking it easy and crafting the world his latest takes place in. Eventually, for reasons to be discovered, he is kidnapped and taken to a place called The Institute, where other children are held against their will and subjected to all manner of horrible experiments. Luke is a genius who stands out amongst a crowd of other special children. Our other main thread follows Luke Ellis, a boy genius attending a school filled with child prodigies. He eventually makes his way to the small town of Dupray, where things are eventually going to heat up. When we meet him, he’s on a flight to New York, but quickly becomes a drifter, in no real rush to get to his original destination. Tim Jamieson is a man with no particular direction. The book follows two separate threads, which eventually become intertwined through fate. One in which had its ups and downs, but by the end takes you on a whirlwind of adventure and emotion. The Institute, by Stephen King, is another such world. A man who in recent times has elevated his craft to a point where most of his novels have transcended beyond a genre, and have become living, breathing worlds that feel fleshed out and lived-in. That joyous time twice a year when we are taken into a world crafted by a master storyteller. Andrew & John's Side by Side Review of THE INSTITUTE by Stephen KingĬonstant Readers, it’s here.
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