Fawn Mckay
Fawn McKay was born 15 September 1915, in Ogden Utah. Reared in the Mormon Church's original family Fawn McKay devoted her brilliant literary talents and remarkable abilities in research to create an outstanding psycho-historical biographical biography of Joseph Smith, published in 1945 under the title No Man Knows My History. The title of this book was inspired by a funeral speech that was delivered by the Church of Latter-Day Saints founder, Joseph Smith. In his sermon, he stated: "You do not know the person I am, and have never met my soul." My story is not known to anyone. Nobody knows my story. Fawn, a 29-year-old woman has written: "Since that moment of candor, at least three writers have risen to the challenge." They do not have a lack of documents, they just contradict each other. The process of collating the documents, of separating firsthand accounts from a third-party copycatting of Mormon and non-Mormon narratives into a mosaic that makes plausible the history. This is exciting and informative. Fawn brodie was professionally dedicated to this task. Thaddeus S. Stevens became immortalized through her works and the fruit of her studies. Scourge of the South (1959) The Devil Drives. Thomas Jefferson. A personal history of Richard Nixon (1974) as and the posthumously Richard Nixon.





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