Fawn Mckay
Fawn Brodie McKay, born September 15, 1915, was raised in Ogden Utah. Fawn McKay, brought up in the Mormon Church's First Family, used her literary talent and skills in researching to produce an intriguing psycho-historical biography of Joseph Smith. Published in 1945 under the title No Man knows My History, she used both. The title came from a funeral sermon delivered by the founding father of the Church of Latter-Day Saints in 1844, when he shocked his listeners by declaring"You don't even know me." I never told you about my heart. Nobody knows my story. Nobody knows my story. I wrote the 29-year-old Fawn in that moment of candor more than three writers have picked up the gauntlet. Some have attacked him, while others have glorified him. Some have attempted to make a clinical diagnosis it is not the fact that these documents lack information, it is rather that they're wildly contradictory. It is a matter of separating personal testimony from third party plagiarism and fitting Mormon-and non-Mormon-narratives into a cohesive mosaic of reliable theology. This is fascinating and fascinating. FawnBrodie was able to take on this expert task with enthusiasm and energy. Thaddeus S. Stevens is immortalized in her works and the fruit of her research. The Scourge of the South (1959) The Devil Drives. Thomas Jefferson. Richard Nixon and An Intimate Historical History (1974).
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