Fawn Mckay
Fawn Brodie McKay born on September 15, 1915, was raised in Ogden Utah. Fawn McCay was born the city of Ogden, Utah in 1915. She was a member of the Mormon church's founder family. She employed her creative writing talents and exceptional abilities to research in order to create the captivating, psychohistorical biography of Joseph Smith. It was published in 45, under the name, "No Man Knows My History". This title was inspired by the funeral sermon delivered by Joseph Smith, creator of the Church of Latter-Day Saints. He shocked his audience by telling his audience: "You don't even know my name. There is no way to know my heart." My history is unknown to anyone. I cannot tell it. I wrote the 29-year-old Fawn in the moment when he spoke, more than three writers have picked up the battle. Many have abhorred him and others have glorified. A few have even made a diagnosis. It's not that documents are not there, but the fact that they're contradictory. The task of assembling the documents, of separating firsthand accounts from third-party plagiarism and integrating Mormon and non-Mormon narratives into a mosaic that makes plausible the history. This is both exciting, and also instructive. FawnBrodie embraced this professional challenge. Thaddeus Steves became a global celebrity as a result of her work in research as well as her work. The Devil drives (1959). Thomas Jefferson. An intimate Historiography (1974) as well as posthumously Richard Nixon.





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