After her marriage to
Jeremy Sandford in 1957, they gave up their smart
Chelsea home and went to live in unfashionable
Battersea where they joined and observed the lower strata of society. From this experience he published the play
Cathy Come Home in 1963, and she wrote
Up the Junction. Dunn came to notice with the publication of
Up the Junction (1963), a series of short stories set in South London, some of which had already appeared in the
New Statesman. The book, awarded the
John Llewellyn Rhys Prize, was a controversial success at the time for its vibrant, realistic and non-judgemental portrait of its working-class protagonists. It was
adapted for television by Dunn, with
Ken Loach, for
The Wednesday Play series, directed by Loach and broadcast in November 1965. A
cinema film version was released in 1968.
Talking to Women (1965) was a collection of interviews with nine friends, "from society heiresses to factory workers (Dunn herself was both)". The interviewees included
Edna O’Brien,
Pauline Boty,
Ann Quin and
Paddy Kitchen. She was elected a fellow of the
Royal Society of Literature in 2004. ==Personal life==