Dec 31, 2009
WRITER
Ruth McKenney is one of the best examples of the ways in which 1930s writers combined radical politics, an appreciation of their audience's need for entertainment, and a desire to document the harsh realities of Depression life. Moving between writing scripts for radio, stage, and screen; light short stories in The New Yorker; essays for the Communist weekly New Masses; and journalism for the World-Telegram in New York, McKenney seems to embody a certain cultural ethos of the period.
Ruth McKenney is best known today as the author of My Sister Eileen, the best-selling account of her family life during her childhood. This 1938 autobiography was a collection of McKenney's New Yorker pieces; a second collection appeared two years later under the title The McKenneys Carry On. Both volumes were critically acclaimed: My Sister...
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