Fawn Mckay
Fawn MCK Brodie was born 15th September 1915 in Ogden Utah. Fawn McKay, born into the Mormon Church's First Family, utilized her writing talent as well as expertise in research to write the intriguing biographical psycho-historical study of Joseph Smith. Published in 1945 with the title: No Man Knows My History, she used both. The title was inspired by the sermon title that Joseph Smith delivered in 1844. He stunned his listeners by stating: "You do not know me and you have never heard my thoughts. Nobody knows my past. I can't tell. Fawn, a 29-year-old woman has written: "Since that moment of candor, at least three writers have picked up the task." A lot of people have detested him while others have deified. There are a few who have come to a diagnosis. Not that the documents aren't there, it's that they're so inconsistent. The task of assembling the documents, of separating firsthand accounts from third-party plagiarism and integrating Mormon and non-Mormon narratives into a masterpiece that creates credible the history. It is both interesting and instructive. Fawn brodie was professionally dedicated to her work. Thaddeus Stewards was the outcome of her writing and research led her to become a well-known author. The Devil drives (1959). Thomas Jefferson. An Intimate Historical Document (1974) and later posthumously Richard Nixon.





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