Skip to Content
Books on the Hill
SHOP
Bookseller Recommendations
Fiction
Non-Fiction
Children's
Special Coffee Table Books
Bookshop.org
Libro Audio
Pre-orders
Book Search
EVENTS
Events
Book Club and Course Subscriptions
Book Club Books
Young Readers Book Clubs
Young Readers Book Club Books
Event Books
Diarmaid MacCulloch
Lucy Worsley
Tracy Borman
Lauren Johnson
RARE BOOKS
Rare Books
Children's Vintage
Valuation Requests
GIFTS
Order a book
Reading Subscriptions
Gift Vouchers
Personal Shopping Experience
Bundles
Merchandise & Gifts
READING ROOMS & CAFE
Reading Rooms & Cafe
Daphne Du Maurier Collection
BLOG
Blog
Prizes
Bookshelves
Blog Books
SCHOOLS
STAHS Book Festival
School
School Packages
Bundles
School Example
Wish List
Core Library Bundles
Verulam Reads
Townsend
Wheatfields
Woodend
Katherine Warington
ABOUT
About
Contact
Local Author Submissions
International Shipping
FAQ'S
Login Account
0
0
Books on the Hill
SHOP
Bookseller Recommendations
Fiction
Non-Fiction
Children's
Special Coffee Table Books
Bookshop.org
Libro Audio
Pre-orders
Book Search
EVENTS
Events
Book Club and Course Subscriptions
Book Club Books
Young Readers Book Clubs
Young Readers Book Club Books
Event Books
Diarmaid MacCulloch
Lucy Worsley
Tracy Borman
Lauren Johnson
RARE BOOKS
Rare Books
Children's Vintage
Valuation Requests
GIFTS
Order a book
Reading Subscriptions
Gift Vouchers
Personal Shopping Experience
Bundles
Merchandise & Gifts
READING ROOMS & CAFE
Reading Rooms & Cafe
Daphne Du Maurier Collection
BLOG
Blog
Prizes
Bookshelves
Blog Books
SCHOOLS
STAHS Book Festival
School
School Packages
Bundles
School Example
Wish List
Core Library Bundles
Verulam Reads
Townsend
Wheatfields
Woodend
Katherine Warington
ABOUT
About
Contact
Local Author Submissions
International Shipping
FAQ'S
Login Account
0
0
Folder: SHOP
Back
Bookseller Recommendations
Fiction
Non-Fiction
Children's
Special Coffee Table Books
Bookshop.org
Libro Audio
Pre-orders
Book Search
Folder: EVENTS
Back
Events
Book Club and Course Subscriptions
Book Club Books
Young Readers Book Clubs
Young Readers Book Club Books
Event Books
Diarmaid MacCulloch
Lucy Worsley
Tracy Borman
Lauren Johnson
Folder: RARE BOOKS
Back
Rare Books
Children's Vintage
Valuation Requests
Folder: GIFTS
Back
Order a book
Reading Subscriptions
Gift Vouchers
Personal Shopping Experience
Bundles
Merchandise & Gifts
Folder: READING ROOMS & CAFE
Back
Reading Rooms & Cafe
Daphne Du Maurier Collection
Folder: BLOG
Back
Blog
Prizes
Bookshelves
Blog Books
Folder: SCHOOLS
Back
STAHS Book Festival
School
School Packages
Bundles
School Example
Wish List
Core Library Bundles
Verulam Reads
Townsend
Wheatfields
Woodend
Katherine Warington
Folder: ABOUT
Back
About
Contact
Local Author Submissions
International Shipping
FAQ'S
Login Account
Contemporary Fiction The Ha-Ha by Jennifer Dawson
9780571390250.jpg Image 1 of
9780571390250.jpg
9780571390250.jpg

The Ha-Ha by Jennifer Dawson

£9.99

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

Quantity:
Add To Cart

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

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

You Might Also Like

How I Won A Nobel Prize by Julius Taranto
How I Won A Nobel Prize by Julius Taranto
£9.99
Aerth by Deborah Tomkins
Aerth by Deborah Tomkins
£10.99
Herscht 07769 by Laszlo Krasznahorkai
Herscht 07769 by Laszlo Krasznahorkai
£20.00
The Lost Love Songs of Boysie Singh by Ingrid Persaud
The Lost Love Songs of Boysie Singh by Ingrid Persaud
£18.99
The Persians by Sanam Mahloudji
The Persians by Sanam Mahloudji
£16.99

Books on the Hill

1 Holywell Hill
St Albans
AL1 1ER

01727 807248

office@books-on-the-hill.co.uk

 
BA-logo.png

Returns Policy |   Local Author Submissions   Carousel