Summer: Rutgers- Creative Writing; "Things Terrible and Unguessable"

Lewes, United Kingdom

Program Overview

Term Start Date End Date Application Deadline
Summer 2025
May 24, 2025
Jun 07, 2025
Mar 01, 2025
Language(s) of Instruction
English
No
No
No
Class Standing
Sophomore
Rising Sophomore
Junior
Rising Junior
Good Academic Standing
Credits

3

Program Advisor

The Program

THINGS TERRIBLE AND UNGUESSABLE: Write Ghost Stories in Haunted England

Eerie inns, cursed castles, wicked woods, grey ladies, black dogs, and red rooms. Plus Dracula Town, The City of 1,000 Ghosts, Jack the Ripper's pub, and the cobbled village where Henry James wrote Turn of the Screw. Explore England's most haunted places, while reading ghost stories by the famous authors who lived there and spinning your own dark yarns inspired by their work. 

Substantial tuition scholarships available through the English Department!

creative writing students

Program Location

Image
Mermaid Inn

United Kingdom

Lewes

Lewes is a quirkily historic market town near England’s south coast and an hour by train from London. Local attractions range from Lewes Castle, Bull House (once the home of Tom Paine), and The Round House (a former windmill owned by Virginia Woolf) to timber-framed bookshops and one of England’s oldest working breweries. The Greenwich meridian runs through the town—there’s even a pub named after it—but the great appeal of Lewes lies in its location; the town is wedged into a scenic gap in the South Downs and dozens of spectacular walks depart from its environs.  Brighton, England’s liveliest seaside city, is less than a half hour away by train.

Students will also visit York, Whitby and the South Downs. Featured in the picture is Mermaid inn in the Rye town, England. 

Academics

We'll start with a train journey to "Haunted York," which claims to have a ghost on every street, home to the Shambles (said to be the inspiration for Harry Potter's Diagon Alley). Then it's up to Whitby for two nights (the town that inspired Bram Stoker's Dracula), to visit the pirate graveyard and the looming clifftop ruin of Whitby Abbey (as well as "Jacob's Ladder," the 199 steps that lead to it, up which bounded Dracula himself, disguised as a big black dog). Then it's down to Essex for ten days, where we'll write/workshop in the cafe's and pubs of Lewes, a hilly sixth century Saxon village with half beam bookshops, medieval streets, and an imposing Norman castle, all wedged between the bone white cliffs of the dreamy South Downs, With day trips to the highly haunted Arundel Castle, the Ten Bells Pub, and the Mermaid Inn (known as "the most haunted hotel in England," with its sliding wall panels, secret passageways, and priest holes). Plus an intimate sea shanty "concert" by the Wellington Wailers at a haunted 200-year-old bayside pub ('Twas then I spied off the starboard side,  a strange mysterious sight; I froze with fear as it drifted near like a ghost in the dark of night."), Sherlock Holmes' retirement cottage, a ghost walk of the Lanes (Brighton's historic haunted quarter), the Long Man of Wilmington (which Neil Gaiman interpreted as the guardian of the gate to Faerie in his Sandman series), Rudyard Kipling's sprawling lichen-covered manse (with its witch marks and hag stones), and Monk's House, where Virginia Woolf lived, wrote, and ultimately drowned herself by filling her pockets with stones and jumping into the nearby River Ouse. And so much more! ““He was there or was not there: not there if I didn't see him.”  Henry James, The Turn of the Screw.

Note: "Things terrible and unguessable" is a phrase from Turn of the Screw by Henry James.

For an example of the work that students produce on the Creative Writing program please take a look at Juhi Farooqui's Walking Essay and her Final Essay.

Listen to Aimee Labrie interview 2 former students about their experience in Lewes on the Writers House Podcast!

For information about study abroad credit transfer, registration, and transcripts please visit the Academics section of our website.

Housing and Meals

Students will stay in shared rooms at the Premier Inn located in Lewes. A full English breakfast is included each morning. Other meals will be taken at local restaurants, including two group meals at the Ram Inn and Bateman’s.

 

Financial Information

Program Costs

This is the billed amount that will appear on your Rutgers term bill during the term you study abroad.
NJ Resident non-NJ Resident
Undergraduate $4,390 $4,700
Graduate $4,580 $4,880
*English Majors are eligible for a $1000 scholarship to lower the cost of the program. Details below.
Program Cost includes:

•    Tuition
•    Housing
•    Some meals
•    Excursions
•    Administrative Fees
•    Emergency Medical Access Abroad

Out-of-Pocket Costs

These are estimated expenses that are not part of your term bill. Students will need to pay for these expenses out-of-pocket.
Airfare $1,200
Meals $500
Books and Classroom Materials $50
Personal Expenses $300
Total $2,050.00
Out-of-Pocket Cost includes:

The above costs are estimations and represent the known out-of-pocket costs students encounter during their time abroad.
 
Some of these expenses will be paid for prior to going abroad, such as an airline ticket, while some of these expenses, such as meals, will be paid in-country as part of your daily expenses. As you plan, you will need to budget these costs and spend wisely throughout your time abroad.

 

Scholarships

Available to all Rutgers students participating in a Rutgers Global–Study Abroad program. Applications can be found inside of your study abroad program application. For more information, please visit the Scholarship section of our website.

Available to all Rutgers students participating in the summer Creative Writing program. To be considered for this award students will need to submit an application for the Rutgers Global-Study Abroad scholarships (available upon acceptance to the program).  Applications will be reviewed by the English department scholarship committee after March 15th. Students will be eligible for an award up to $1,000. 

People

Alex Dawson

Alex Dawson is full time faculty at Rutgers University, where he teaches creative writing courses geared towards fantasy, folklore, and weird fiction and curates/hosts "Inside the Writers House," a weekly video chat with authors from all over the world. He also helms a fantasy fiction winter workshop/retreat in Ireland and Scotland with authors Dave Rudden (12 Angels Weeping) and Lev Grossman (The Magicians)

Aimee Labrie

Aimee LaBrie’s short story collection, Wonderful Girl, was chosen as the Katherine Anne Porter Prize in Fiction and published by the University of North Texas Press. Her stories have appeared in Pleiades, Beloit Fiction Journal, Cleaver Magazine, Iron Horse Literary Review, The Minnesota Review, Permafrost, and other literary journals. In 2012, she won first place in Zoetrope’s All-Story Fiction contest. Aimee lives in Princeton, NJ and works as a lecturer and senior program administrator for creative writing at Rutgers University.

Jocelynn Dow

This was my first time leaving the country without my family. It was funny how all the initial excitement I had about embarking on this new journey turned into angst as my departure date got closer. The thought of being 3,500+  miles away from home sounded daunting, but once I met everyone and saw how passionate they were about creative writing and the whole experience, I immediately felt at ease.

The professors were amazing and served as guides throughout our experience. Both Alex and Kate (yes, we called our professors by their first names) were enthusiastic about making our South Downers experience a rich, enlightening and engaging experience. Most days began with a group hike in the fresh air of the Lewes, followed by some sort of exploration, and then ended with us sharing our writing inventions as a group with each other. It was so much fun! 

Engaging with people abroad and traveling the towns of the countryside, as well as London allowed me to expand my Western perspective. It was huge to me as a creative to walk the same paths and places as writers of the past were as I authored new works. I enjoyed our tours of Victoria Wolfe’s home, as well as Ruyard Kipling’s place, traversing the hilly topography of the South Downs, and venturing to the markets, and bookshops. I indulged in afternoon tea and cakes, visited coffee houses, and even sang a shanty at a local pub (a true first for me). Attending the Shakespearean Globe Theatre was truly something I will never forget. Important side note – if you stand in the audience you’ll be able to interact with the actors!

All in all this was the perfect study abroad experience for me. The absence of a language barrier, friendliness of everyone and manageable workload of the course all contributed to my positive endeavor. If you are considering studying abroad, do it! It will truly be an enriching adventure!

Summer 2017

"Two of my favorite moments of the trip were visiting Brighton and hiking the Seven Sisters. I had been most excited about visiting London, but I ended up loving Brighton a lot more. It was such a colorful and welcoming city. On our last weekend, we hiked the Seven Sisters at Seaford which are seven chalk cliffs overlooking the English Channel. The sun-bleached cliffs against the different blue hues of the sea and the greenery from the fields were the most beautiful sight I have ever seen."