Fawn Mckay
Fawn McCay Brodie was born in Ogden Utah September 15, 1915. Born into the Mormon Church's first family Fawn McKay devoted her brilliant literary talents and remarkable researching skills in the creation of an amazing psycho-historical account of Joseph Smith, published in 1945. The book was titled"No Man Knows My History. The title was inspired by a funeral speech given in 1844 by the Church of Latter-Day Saints founder, Joseph Smith. The sermon said: "You do not know what I'm about and you've never seen my heart." My past is not known to anyone. I'm not able to tell my story. The 29-year-old wrote Fawn in this moment of honesty, about three dozen writers have jumped on the challenge. A lot of people have detested him while others have glorified. A few have even made a diagnosis. Not that the documents aren't there, it's that they are so contradictory. Compiling these documents - - sifting through first-hand and third-hand sources, fitting the Mormons' stories to those of those of non-Mormons into a true history - is challenging. This is exciting as well as instructive. FawnBrodie took on this professional challenge. Thaddeus Steves became a worldwide famous person due to her research and her work. The Devil Drives (1959) Scourge of the South Thomas Jefferson. Richard Nixon, An Intimate historiography (1974) Posthumous.





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