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Das Institut (englischer Originaltitel "The Institute") ist ein 2019 erschienener Science-Fiction-/Horror-Thriller von Stephen King. Das Buch wird aus der Sicht des zwölfjährigen Luke Ellis und des ehemaligen Polizisten Tim Jamieson erzählt. Luke ist ein Genie mit telekinetischen Fähigkeiten. Nachdem seine Eltern ermordet werden und er gekidnappt wird, wacht er in dem Institut auf. Das Institut ist eine Einrichtung, in der Kinder mit telepathischen oder telekinetischen Fähigkeiten festgehalten werden. Währenddessen landet Tim nach einer Serie von zufälligen Entscheidungen als Nachtwächter in einer Kleinstadtt.

Das Institut wurde von Kritikern grundsätzlich positiv aufgenommen.[1]

Tim Jamieson hat sein bisheriges Leben in Florida hinter sich gelassen und ist auf dem Weg nach New York City. Aus einer Laune heraus gibt er seinen Platz im Flugzeug auf und trampt per Anhalter bis zu der Kleinstadt DuPray in South Carolina. Früher ein hochgelobter Polizist, wird Tim ein lokaler Nachtwächter für den Sheriff und beginnt eine Beziehung mit dessen Stellvertreterin Wendy Gullickson.

Der andere Handlungsstrang beginnt in einem Vorort von Minneapolis, wo Luke Ellis,

a twelve-year-old intellectual prodigy with mild telekinetic abilities. One night, intruders silently murder Luke's parents and kidnap him. Luke wakes up in a room almost identical to his own at "the Institute," a facility secretly located deep in the forests of Maine. The Institute houses a number of other kidnapped children, each with special talents—telekinesis and telepathy. Luke befriends several other kids: Kalisha Benson, Nick Wilholm, George Iles, Iris Stanhope, Helen Simms, and later ten-year-old Avery Dixon, in the area known as Front Half. Mrs. Sigsby, the Institute's director, and her staff are dedicated to extracting the special talents from the children - known as TPs (telepaths) and TKs (telekinetics). Experiments and torture are performed on the children to try to enhance their talents, as well as to awaken TP abilities in TKs and vice versa. Once the experiments are done, the children "graduate" to Back Half. None of the children who have gone to Back Half have ever been seen again. Luke begins to develop weak TP abilities due to the experimentation but keeps it secret. After Kalisha graduates to Back Half, she is able to send telepathic messages to Avery, an advanced TP. Luke comes to believe that in Back Half, the children's collective abilities are weaponized for assassinations until the strain kills them. Luke becomes desperate to escape and get help before he graduates.

Maureen Alvorson, a housekeeper at the Institute, is also an informant for Mrs. Sigsby, but her financial issues cause her to seek help from Luke. Maureen thus helps Luke to escape the Institute and then commits suicide in order to help hide his disappearance. The Institute's deteriorated security takes almost a day to realize Luke's escape, by which time he has found himself on a train, which he jumps off of in DuPray. A hotel owner in DuPray is on the payroll of those in charge of the Institute and informs them that Luke is in town. Meanwhile, Luke manages to convince Tim, Wendy, and other police officers of his story and gives the Sheriff a USB stick containing a confession from Maureen, along with a harrowing video taken secretly in Back Half, which convinces them to help him. Staffers from the Institute arrive in DuPray and, following a shoot-out, several officers and all but Mrs. Sigsby and a doctor from the Institute are killed. Tim and Luke take the captured Mrs. Sigsby back to the Institute where her second-in-command, Trevor Stackhouse, tries to ambush them. Since Tim made Mrs. Sigsby drive the car, the Institute's guards mistakenly kill her.

While Luke has been away, several Back Half children, including Avery (who was sent to Back Half as punishment for helping Luke escape), round up those who have been in Back Half for longer, and whose minds are almost completely broken, and plan a revolution. Stackhouse gives orders to kill them using poison gas created by mixing the facility's cleaning chemicals. As the gas is released, Avery, Kalisha, Iris, George, Nick, Helen, and the others join and fight back, managing to levitate areas of the Institute into the air. Kalisha, George, Nick, and Helen escape, but the others, including Avery, are killed when the corridor they are trapped in collapses. The remaining Institute staff are all killed or flee, and Tim takes Luke and his surviving friends back with him to DuPray.

Months later, they are visited by the supervisor of the Institute, who speaks with a vague lisp and explains that the children in the Institute were being used to combat those who precogs working for the Institute have seen threatening the safety of the entire world. The Institute is just one of several around the world, but all of them have had revolutions at the same time, apparently all telepathically coordinated by Avery. Luke argues with the man about the possibility of predicting the distant future, claiming that precogs can only accurately predict occurrences that happen in the near future, as there are too many variables involved over long time spans. The lisping man leaves Luke and his friends alone for the promise that the USB Stick will not come to public knowledge; the USB stick is kept hidden in a safe, with each of the surviving children holding a key.

The other kids slowly return to their homes, but Luke remains in DuPray with Tim and Wendy, and the novel ends with Luke thinking about what a little hero Avery was.

At the review aggregator website Book Marks, which assigns individual ratings to book reviews from mainstream literary critics, the novel received a cumulative "Positive" rating based on 26 reviews: 9 "Rave" reviews, 13 "Positive" reviews, and 4 "Mixed" reviews.[1] Publishers Weekly gave the novel a rave review, writing, "King wows with the most gut-wrenching tale of kids triumphing over evil since It [...] Tapping into the minds of the young characters, King creates a sense of menace and intimacy that will have readers spellbound [...] Not a word is wasted in this meticulously crafted novel, which once again proves why King is the king of horror."[2] Kirkus Reviews praised the book, though commented that it wasn't as scary of some of King's other work, saying, "King fans won't be disappointed, though most will likely prefer the scarier likes of The Shining and It."[3] Booklists Carl Hays praised the novel, saying, "King devotees will, of course, devour this latest suspenseful page-turner, but any reader looking for a smart thriller about an unusual black ops organization will find this compelling and rewarding. With his usual blend of plot twists and vividly drawn characters, King remains at the top of his game."[4]

Writing for The Sunday Times, John Dugdale called it "a captivating, hybrid novel" but questioned its meaning, saying, "What it all adds up to, though, is unclear."[5] Talking of Mrs. Sigsby and the people at the Institution, Laura Miller of The New York Times said "Of all the cosmic menaces that King’s heroes have battled, this slow creep into inhumanity may be the most terrifying yet because it is all too real."[6] In January 2020, Truly Hunter said "Fans of Stephen King will likely fall in love with this book. If readers are looking for something new that feels like classic King, this is the book to pick up. It is a new take on an old premise with a classic Stephen King spin. The novel has everything King readers have come to expect and it could be the one recent King release that stands as a new classic from the author," however criticized the book's length.[7] King noted connections between the novel and some of former President Donald Trump's actions, including "Children, seeking asylum at the border ... being removed from their parents under the administration’s family separation policy."[8]

On the novel's publication date, it was announced that the television rights were secured by Spyglass Television for a limited series, with David E. Kelley writing, Jack Bender directing and both Kelley and Bender executive producing.[9]

Einzelnachweise

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  1. a b The Institute. In: Book Marks. Abgerufen am 7. Mai 2020 (englisch).
  2. Sci-Fi/Fantasy/Horror Book Review: The Institute by Stephen King. In: Publishers Weekly. 21. Juni 2019; (englisch).
  3. The Institute by Stephen King. In: Kirkus Reviews. 4. August 2019; (englisch).
  4. Carl Hays: Institute, by Stephen King. In: Booklist Online. (englisch).
  5. John Dugdale: The Institute by Stephen King review — the author is now too versatile to be pigeonholed. In: The Sunday Times. 25. August 2019; (englisch).
  6. Laura Miller: 'The Institute' Might Be Stephen King's Scariest Novel Yet In: The New York Times, 10. September 2019. Abgerufen am 10. August 2021 (englisch). 
  7. Truly Hunter: Stephen King's The Institute could be a classic, as long as readers can finish it. 9. Januar 2020, abgerufen am 10. August 2021 (amerikanisches Englisch).
  8. Matt Miller: Stephen King Was Writing A Horror Story About Imprisoning Children. Then Trump Actually Did it. In: Esquire. 3. September 2019, abgerufen am 10. August 2021 (amerikanisches Englisch).
  9. Petski, Denise (September 10, 2019). "David E. Kelley, Jack Bender Developing Stephen King's ‘The Institute’ As Limited Series." Deadline.com. Retrieved September 29, 2019.

{{SORTIERUNG:Institut #Das}} [[Kategorie:Werk von Stephen King]] [[Kategorie:Literarisches Werk]] [[Kategorie:Literatur (Englisch)]] [[Kategorie:Literatur (21. Jahrhundert) ]] [[Kategorie:Literatur (Vereinigte Staaten)]] [[Kategorie:Horrorliteratur]]