Fawn Mckay
Fawn McKay was born on 15 September 1915, in Ogden Utah. Fawn McCay was born the city of Ogden, Utah in 1915, and was raised by the Mormon church's founding family. She employed her creative writing talents and exceptional research skills to write an amazing, psychohistorical biographical work of Joseph Smith. It was published in 45, under the name, "No Man Knows My History". The title comes from the funeral sermon of Joseph Smith, the founding father of the Church of Latter-Day Saints. The preacher shocked the audience when he said declaring: "You don't even know my name. There is no way to know the depths of my soul." My past is not known to anyone. I'm not able to tell my story. Fawn wrote the 29-year-old Fawn. Since that moment, at least three writers have stood up to the challenge. There are some who have tried to make a clinical diagnosis. The documents aren't insufficient and contradictory. The task is to sort out first-hand testimony from third hand plagiarism and fitting Mormon-and non-Mormon-narratives into a cohesive mosaic of reliable theology. It's both thrilling and instructive. This is the kind of task to which Fawn Brodie devoted herself professionally. Thaddeus Stevens. Stevens became immortalized through her writing and by the results of her research. The Scourge of the south (1959) The Devil Drives. Thomas Jefferson. Richard Nixon, An Intimate historical account (1974) The posthumous.





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