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The Institut

The Institut

List Price: $15.99
Your Price: $13.59
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: PROVOCATIVE STORY
Review: Here's what Don McKinney of the Hilton Head Island Packet has to say about The Institut in his July 22, 2001 review: "... not your ordinary suspense or religious novel...it is hard not to be caught up in his [Warmus'] provocative story...his story never fails to hold one's interest."

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Thrilling, engaging mystery
Review: In The Institut, John Warmus successfully brings a sense of suspense, religion, and creepiness into a riveting mystery.

This novel pulls you in with its superb integration of setting, then carries you along with the tension of knowing a greater truth will be revealed. Warmus writes with an unobtrusive pen, never overtelling the story, never letting one of its elements outweigh the other. This is a page turner if there ever was one.

Secrets of the Catholic Church are revealed, along with some well-detailed characterization. I enjoyed The Institut from the start right up until the end. Many times, when reading such a book, I am taken off course by either heavy-handed preaching or a plot that cannot carry the book. This novel is balanced, in a way that allows each element to be present, but not overwhelm another.

If you like mysteries, or you are interested in religion and the church, The Institut offers some great insight, and a great story as well.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Intense and unnerving.
Review: Intense and unnerving. John Warmus??? The Institut is the kind of novel that once you start reading, you can???t stop until the book is done. It is an almost supernatural thriller, written with amazing detail and insight.

The mystery takes place in 1938. Edmond Defont is a police investigator looking into a rash of suicides by female teenagers in a town where death is something of a rarity.

David Proust is a priest plagued by vivid nightmares. The nightmares appear graphic enough that the priest falls ill from the episodes. He is no longer sure if he is sane and fears that he might be possessed. His haunted dreams reveal what happened to the girls before their untimely demise. Proust is certain that somehow he is responsible for the deaths. Are they premonitions? Or is Proust acting out on animal instinct, in a blackout stage, and then struggling with his subconscious to avoid facing the truth, that he might be a rapist and murderer?

The deaths trouble Defont, and is evidence leads toward a suspect ??? The suspense is turned up a notch when two people disappear and Defont must track them all the way to Poland to solve the mysteries he is involved in.

A rocket of a ride, fast and unrelenting. Warmus convinces me that he knows a lot about priests, a lot about the ways they live and plenty about the thoughts that must fill their minds. The Institut is full of dramatic and tension-filled scenes, crisp narrative and real-talk dialogue. Warmus???s novel is all any reader could want in a page-turning thriller...

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Intense and unnerving.
Review: Intense and unnerving. John Warmus' The Institut is the kind of novel that once you start reading, you can't stop until the book is done. It is an almost supernatural thriller, written with amazing detail and insight.

The mystery takes place in 1938. Edmond Defont is a police investigator looking into a rash of suicides by female teenagers in a town where death is something of a rarity.

David Proust is a priest plagued by vivid nightmares. The nightmares appear graphic enough that the priest falls ill from the episodes. He is no longer sure if he is sane and fears that he might be possessed. His haunted dreams reveal what happened to the girls before their untimely demise. Proust is certain that somehow he is responsible for the deaths. Are they premonitions? Or is Proust acting out on animal instinct, in a blackout stage, and then struggling with his subconscious to avoid facing the truth, that he might be a rapist and murderer?

The deaths trouble Defont, and is evidence leads toward a suspect ' The suspense is turned up a notch when two people disappear and Defont must track them all the way to Poland to solve the mysteries he is involved in.

A rocket of a ride, fast and unrelenting. Warmus convinces me that he knows a lot about priests, a lot about the ways they live and plenty about the thoughts that must fill their minds. The Institut is full of dramatic and tension-filled scenes, crisp narrative and real-talk dialogue. Warmus's novel is all any reader could want in a page-turning thriller...

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: very lush and juicy novel
Review: The Catholic Church assigns Father David Proust to minister to the congregation of St. Margaret's in La Rochelle, France. The parishioners, the other clergy, and almost everyone the priest comes in contact with adore the selfless giving man. All is right in the priest's world until he starts dreaming about stimulating young teenage girls and getting her pregnant. After the dream, the girls commit suicide convinced they're possessed.

David also believes he's possessed but the Church sends him to the insane asylum, the Institut in Poland near the Carpathian Mountains to live out his years. His friend, a fellow priest, his doctor and a police man on the case all travel to the Institut, not realizing once they enter they can never leave. Two young women arrive at the Institut and David once again dreams of getting one of them pregnant. To every one's shock she becomes pregnant leaving people to wonder if she is carrying a messiah, an anti-Christ or something not of this world.

This is a very lush and juicy novel that is fascinating to read but not easy to classify. The INSTITUT calls in to question the basis for the formation of the Catholic Church leaving the reader wondering if any part of the author's theory could be true. The men who willing stayed at The Institut with David are the true heroes of the book and shows that the bond of friendship, when true, run very deep.

Harriet Klausner

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: very lush and juicy novel
Review: The Catholic Church assigns Father David Proust to minister to the congregation of St. Margaret's in La Rochelle, France. The parishioners, the other clergy, and almost everyone the priest comes in contact with adore the selfless giving man. All is right in the priest's world until he starts dreaming about stimulating young teenage girls and getting her pregnant. After the dream, the girls commit suicide convinced they're possessed.

David also believes he's possessed but the Church sends him to the insane asylum, the Institut in Poland near the Carpathian Mountains to live out his years. His friend, a fellow priest, his doctor and a police man on the case all travel to the Institut, not realizing once they enter they can never leave. Two young women arrive at the Institut and David once again dreams of getting one of them pregnant. To every one's shock she becomes pregnant leaving people to wonder if she is carrying a messiah, an anti-Christ or something not of this world.

This is a very lush and juicy novel that is fascinating to read but not easy to classify. The INSTITUT calls in to question the basis for the formation of the Catholic Church leaving the reader wondering if any part of the author's theory could be true. The men who willing stayed at The Institut with David are the true heroes of the book and shows that the bond of friendship, when true, run very deep.

Harriet Klausner

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: TERRIFIC STORY
Review: The Institut is a terrific story. You will be held captive - as were the children of the Institut. You will never be the same after a trip into these Carpathian Mountains.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: IS GOD ALIVE?
Review: The Institut is an exciting new novel by the author of The Suicide Club. If you've ever read the Bible, or even if you haven't, but wonder -- you have to read The Institut. A fast-paced suspense filled story exposing a secret the church has kept hidden for 2,000 years. John Warmus delves into the archives of Christianity hidden in the Carpathian Mountain to reveal just who God is."

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: SPECIAL MYSTERY
Review: The Institut is one of those special mysteries that keeps you involved and thinking even after the last page is turned. It is an exciting and thought-provoking read!

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: One peron's Opinion
Review: THE INSTITUT proved to be a difficult read that, at times, seemed to be confusing. However, I found myself reading (and at times re-reading) the next page to find out what would happen to Monsieur Defont and the cocky Dr. Martine. It did prove thought provoking in providing a possible explaination to our existence and the religion(s) that the world's population holds so dear. I was somewhat captivated by the debunking of the Catholic religion and the many atrocities they did in "the name of God." To say more would give away the ending.
I suggest you buy the book and come to your own conclusion to the true nature of God and religion.


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