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The Ha-Ha (Faber Editions)

Jennifer Dawson

Exclusive Offer: To celebrate the publication of The Ha-Ha by Jennifer Dawson, we’ve created a beautiful A4 print*, available only from Faber, that we will send out to the first 100 readers to buy the book on pre-order. Click through the image carousel to view the print.

£9.99
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780571390250
Date Published
31.07.2025
Delivery
All orders are sent via Royal Mail and are tracked: choose from standard or premium delivery.

Summary

This lost classic coming-of-age tale is a tragicomic portrait of one young woman’s university breakdown and recovery, introduced by Daisy Johnson.

I wanted the knack of existing. I did not know the rules … I wanted to tell them all about the animals, but would they understand?

A tea party at an Oxford college. Earnest undergraduates in floral dresses clink cups, discussing essay-crises, punting, summer balls. But to one student, they are grotesquely transformed: she is sitting among ominous armadillos with scaly shells, buzzing with black flies. Then, the laughter comes. As she is engulfed by mirthless hysterics, the Principal has no choice but to send her away.

Josephine’s entrance into the world of other people wasn’t what she imagined. Since her mother’s death, reality seems a badly painted canvas, viewed through the wrong end of a telescope; she always thinks the wrong things, cowed by the brightness of existence. It is a relief to belong, for once, within the mental institution where she is taken. But eventually, she must reintegrate with society—and through a transformative encounter with a fellow patient, a return to real life seems possible …

Winner of the 1961 James Tait Black Prize

*Exclusive Offer: Card stock is textured FSC® certified board made up of 65% virgin fibres, 20% recycled material and 15% cotton fibres.

Please note that prints will be sent out separately to the book.

Critic Reviews

Highly original and deeply relatable, The Ha-Ha is a radiant and powerful work that shines an unflinching light on the darker places.

Claire-Louise Bennett
Critic Reviews

Cool, short, tender and occasionally as prettily ruthless as the impact of a stiletto heel.

Tatler
Critic Reviews

Some novels alight in the glimmering interstice between enthralling and necessary. This is one of them.

Claire Kilroy
Critic Reviews

How can a novel so quiet and unsentimental be so moving? The sadness is right there, the beauty sneaks up on you. It took my breath away.

Meg Mason
Critic Reviews

An enormously personal text . . . the issues it addresses seem more relevant than ever.

Daisy Johnson
Critic Reviews

Gleaming and courageous.

Emma Glass

JenniferDawson

Jennifer Dawson (1929 – 2000) was born and brought up in Kennington and Camberwell with her three sisters and one brother in a family of Fabian socialists; her mother was a journalist and her father worked for the Workers’ Travel Association. She read History at St Anne’s College, Oxford, where she suffered a breakdown and spent several months in the…

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JenniferDawson