Fawn Mckay
Fawn McKay Brodie was born in Ogden Utah on September 15 1915. Fawn MacKay, who was a Mormon belonging to the Church of the Latter Day Saints' founding family was able to combine her ability to write and her remarkable expertise in research to create the incredible psychohistorical book, No Man Knows My History, which was released in 1945. The title derives from the funeral sermon delivered by Joseph Smith, founding father of The Church of Latter-Day Saints. The preacher shocked the audience when he said proclaiming: "You don't even know my name. There is no way to know my heart." My history is unknown to everyone. Nobody knows my story. Fawn the 29 year old woman wrote: "Since that moment of truthfulness, three or more writers have picked up the challenge." Some have deified and abused the man, and others attempt to identify the cause. The problem isn't it's that the documents aren't sufficient, however they're wildly contradictions. This task is to delineate the original account from third-hand plagiarism and to blend Mormon claims with the non-Mormons' in an authentic historical mosaic. This is an exciting as well as educational journey. It's a task which Fawn Brodie committed herself professionally. Thaddeus Stewards, which was the outcome from her writing and study was what made her a popular writer. The Scourge of the Southern (1959) The Devil Drives. Thomas Jefferson. An intimate History (1974) and later posthumously Richard Nixon.





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