• STUDENT ACCOUNTS
  • STUDENT ACCESS
  • FACULTY ACCESS
  • 0Shopping Cart
MFA Program for Writers | Warren Wilson
  • OUR PROGRAM
    • Program Overview
    • Residency
    • Tuition and Fees
    • FAQs
  • FACULTY
    • Current Faculty
    • Active Faculty
    • Past Faculty
  • ALUMNI
    • Alumni Information & Bibliography
    • Post-Graduate Semester
    • Fellowships and Stipends
    • Request a Transcript
  • NEWS
  • APPLY
  • CONTACT
  • SHOP THE MFA STORE
    • Audio recordings: Residency lectures
    • Books: Faculty anthologies
    • Videos: Craft and the Writing Life series
    • Collections
  • Search
  • Menu Menu

Charles Baxter: What We Talk about When We Talk about Horror (July 2018)

$5.00

In certain stories, plays, and novels, an x factor occurs so that a metaphorical door closes, whether in the mind or in the physical universe, and subsequently reality becomes destabilized and nightmarish–becomes a “Wonderland.” Both reader and character have trouble distinguishing what is ‘real’ from what mysterious x factor is disrupting the mental or physical landscape. Baxter explores “wonderlands” in Macbeth, Daphne DuMaurier’s “Don’t Look Now” and “The Birds,” and other texts.

Category: Residency Craft Lectures Tag: Fiction
  • Additional information

Additional information

Residency

2018 – July

Faculty Member

Baxter, Charles

Related products

  • Ira Sadoff: Modernism, Writing Workshops, and the Myth of Closure (July 1995)

    $5.00
  • Brooks Haxton: Rhythmic Plot (July 2004)

    $5.00
  • Chris Forhan: What Happens When I Say “I” (July 2002)

    $5.00
  • Wilton Barnhardt: Risk (July 1998)

    $5.00

The MFA Program for Writers at Warren Wilson College

701 Warren Wilson Rd. Swannanoa, NC 28778
[email protected]     (828) 771-3715

STUDENT ACCOUNTS      STUDENT ACCESS      FACULTY ACCESS

© 2023 MFA for Writers at Warren Wilson :: Website by Integritive Web Design :: Asheville, NC
Christopher Castellani: Inventing the Real (July 2018)Kaveh Akbar: Sell Your Cleverness and Buy Bewilderment: On the Poetics of Wonder...
Scroll to top