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  1. Richard Bransten (February 24, 1906 – November 18, 1955) was an American novelist, screenwriter, and Communist Party member.

  2. Mar 15, 2018 · It centers on her relationship with her husband, Richard Bransten, an editor at the New Masses, whom she married eight days after their first meeting. In their first decade together, they...

  3. Mar 18, 2010 · Ruth McKenney and her husband, Richard Bransten, were fictionalized in Christina Stead’s posthumously published novel “I’m Dying Laughing” (1986).

  4. In 1937, McKenney married fellow writer Richard Bransten (pen name Bruce Minton). McKenney and Bransten were both one-time Communists , although they were purged from the party in 1946. They had a son Paul and a daughter Eileen, [15] named in memory of Ruth's sister.

  5. Daughter of John S. and Marguerite Flynn McKenney; married Richard Bransten, 1937; children: three. Ruth McKenney was raised in Indiana and Ohio, where she began working in a print shop at age fourteen.

  6. Dec 21, 2003 · Ruth McKenney had also married a writer, Richard Bransten, in 1937. The son of the head of MJB Coffee, a large West Coast company, he often wrote for the leftist New Masses magazine (as did...

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  8. Sep 9, 2013 · While achieving tremendous professional success, McKenney experienced a personal life of tragedy. She married Richard Bransten, who wrote under the pen name Bruce Minton, in 1938. Both became Communists. They were ousted from the Communist Party in 1946.