The Institute
In the middle of the night, in a house on a quiet street in suburban Minneapolis, intruders silently murder Luke Ellis’s parents and load him into a black SUV. The operation takes less than two minutes. Luke will wake up at The Institute, in a room that looks just like his own, except there’s no window. And outside his door are other doors, behind which are other kids with special talents—telekinesis and telepathy—who got to this place the same way Luke did: Kalisha, Nick, George, Iris, and ten-year-old Avery Dixon. They are all in Front Half. Others, Luke learns, graduated to Back Half, “like the roach motel,” Kalisha says. “You check in, but you don’t check out.” In this most sinister of institutions, the director, Mrs. Sigsby, and her staff are ruthlessly dedicated to extracting from these children the force of their extranormal gifts. There are no scruples here. If you go along, you get tokens for the vending machines. If you don’t, punishment is brutal. As each new victim disappears to Back Half, Luke becomes more and more desperate to get out and get help. But no one has ever escaped from the Institute. As psychically terrifying as Firestarter, and with the spectacular
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Twelve-year-old Luke Ellis is on track for MIT and Emerson when masked agents kill his parents and take him to the Institute, a hidden compound in the Maine woods. The Front Half holds children with small psychic gifts, and they are run through tests and shots until they are sent to the Back Half.
Yes. MGM+ released a series adaptation of The Institute in 2025. The show is largely faithful to the novel's premise of children with psychic powers held in a secret facility.
The Institute is horror-adjacent thriller more than pure horror, with mounting institutional dread rather than supernatural scares. Most readers find it propulsive and disturbing rather than terrifying.
The Institute was written by Stephen King, published in 2019 by Scribner.
The Institute is 624 pages in standard print editions, though page counts vary slightly between hardcover, paperback, and large-print formats.
At an average reading pace of about 250 words per minute, The Institute takes most readers 9 to 14 hours to finish.
The Institute is a standalone novel by Stephen King, not part of a series.
The Institute is available in hardcover, paperback, ebook, and audiobook formats from Amazon, Bookshop.org, ThriftBooks, and most major bookstores.