Fawn Mckay
Fawn Brodie McKay born on the 15th of September 1915 was raised in Ogden Utah. Fawn MCKAY, who was raised in the Mormon Church's First Family, employed her creative talents and research abilities to create an intriguing psycho-historical biography of Joseph Smith. Published in 1945 under the title No Man is a Master of My History, she used both. The name was taken from the title of a sermon that Joseph Smith delivered in 1844. In the sermon, he amazed his audience with the statement: You don't know me, and you've never listened to my voice. Nobody knows my story. I can't tell. Fawn has written the 29-year-old Fawn. From that point there have been at least three writers who have stood up to this challenge. Some have tried to make a clinical diagnosis. Documents do not lack and contradictory. The process of assembling these documents, sorting through third- and first-hand sources and fitting Mormons' tales of the past to non-Mormons' into an authentic historical context - can be a challenge. It is both exciting and informative. Fawn brodie was professionally committed to the task. Her research as well as her writing earned her the world's attention: Thaddeus Stevens. The Devil Drives (1959) Scourge Of The South Thomas Jefferson. Richard Nixon, An Intimate historical account (1974), posthumous.





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