Fawn Mckay
Fawn McKay was born 15 September 1915 in Ogden, Utah. Fawn McCay was born Utah's Ogden in 1915. She was a member of the Mormon church's founder family. She employed her creative writing talents and exceptional abilities to research in order to create the brilliant, psycho-historical, biographical work of Joseph Smith. It was released in the year 45 under the name, "No Man Knows My History". This title comes from a funeral sermon delivered by Joseph Smith, the Church of Latter-Day Saints' founder. Nobody knows my story. It's impossible to tell. Fawn (29 an age) stated that in the time she has been honest since the moment she made her statement, three-hundred writers have risen to the occasion. A lot of them have denigrated him and some have deified him; some have even attempted to make a diagnosing him. The problem isn't that documents are lacking it is rather that they're wildly contradictory. The task of assembling these papers--of sorting first-hand information from a third-party copycatting of Mormon as well as non-Mormon stories into a mosaic that makes plausible history. This is both exciting and instructive. It's a task which Fawn Brodie put her professional energy into. The results of her study and writing immortalized her with worldwide fame. Thaddeus Stevens. "The Devil's Drive" (1959) The Scourge of South. Thomas Jefferson. Richard Nixon and An Intimate Historiography (1974).





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