Jennifer Dawson
Jennifer Dawson (23 January 1929 – 14 October 2000) was an English novelist. Her works explored the theme of mental illness and society's attitudes to those suffering from such conditions. She won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize for her first novel, ''The Ha-Ha'' (1961), and the Cheltenham Festival Award for her second novel, ''Fowler's Snare'' (1962). Provided by Wikipedia
Showing 1 - 1 results of 1 for search 'Jennifer Dawson', query time: 0.02s
Refine Results
-
1
TRANSCENDENT (Transforming Research by Assessing Neuroinformatics across the Spectrum of Concussion by Embedding iNterdisciplinary Data-collection to Enable Novel Treatments): prot... by Charlotte Anderson, Nick Reed, Andrée-Anne Ledoux, Roger Zemek, Keith Yeates, Carolyn Emery, Pamela Fuselli, Isabelle J Gagnon, Kathryn J Schneider, Sharon Johnston, David R Howell, Richard Webster, Peter Tanuseputro, Andrew R Mayer, Miriam H Beauchamp, Rebecca Robillard, Christina L Master, Kristine Dalton, Khaled El Emam, John Leddy, Noah Silverberg, Jennifer Dawson, Martin H Osmond, Stephanie Cowle, Christopher Giza, Monica Lamoureux, Nicholas Barrowman, Kitty Chen, Daniel J Corwin, Erin Fox, Lisa M Albrecht, Araba Chintoh, Achelle Cortel-LeBlanc, Miguel Cortel-LeBlanc, Andrew Dodd, Steven Hicks, Stephen Alexander Kutcher, Carlos Lalonde, Rebekah C Mannix, Ivan Terekhov, Cheryl Lea Wellington
Published 2025-04-01Get full text
Article