Fawn Mckay
Fawn MCK Brodie was born on the 15th of September 1915 at Ogden Utah. Fawn McCay was born in Utah's Ogden in 1915. She was a member of the Mormon church's founding family. She employed her creativity in writing and her extraordinary abilities to research in order to create the brilliant, psycho-historical, biographical work of Joseph Smith. It was published in the year 45 with the name, "No Man Knows My History". This title is taken from the funeral sermon of Joseph Smith who was the founding father of the Church of Latter-Day Saints. He shocked his audience by saying: "You don't even know my name. There is no way to know my heart." Nobody knows my past. I'm not able to tell my story. The 29-year-old wrote Fawn: Since the moment when he spoke, at least three-score writers have picked up the battle. Many have abhorred him and some have praised. Few have made an assessment. Not that the documents are missing, it's the fact that they're contradictory. It's a daunting task to assemble these documents by separating the first-hand versions from the third-hand versions and then combining Mormon accounts with those of non-Mormon people into a coherent collection. This is both exciting, and also instructive. Fawn Brodie's life as a professional was dedicated to this goal. Thaddeus S. Stevens was immortalized by her work and the fruits of her study. The Scourge of the Southern (1959) The Devil Drives. Thomas Jefferson. Richard Nixon, An Intimate history (1974) Posthumous.





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