Dawson was known for his stream-of-consciousness style. Much of his work was lax in punctuation to emphasize the immediacy of thought. His work has been compared to other Beat poets, including
Jack Kerouac and
Allen Ginsberg. He has been called "The Best St. Louis Writer You've Never Read" by David Clewell, a professor of history at Webster University. Porter Fox has written of Dawson, "Many of his best pieces were short, often autobiographical. Some of the greatest were just a page or two. The writing was plain-faced, without contrived plots, bookish vocabulary, or literary allusions."
Robert Creeley said of his work, "I have never seen a writer capable of such fast shifts, so instantly, nervously exact." The Fielding Dawson Papers are housed at the library of the
University of Connecticut. ==Partial bibliography==