Fawn Mckay
Fawn McKay was born on 15 September 1915 in the city of Ogden in Utah. Reared in the Mormon Church's first family Fawn McKay devoted her creative writing talents as well as her remarkable expertise in researching to produce the remarkable psycho-historical account of Joseph Smith, published in 1945, entitled"No Man is able to know My History. The title comes from a funeral sermon delivered by the founder of the Church of Latter-Day Saints in 1844 when he startled the congregation with his words: You don't know me and you've never known my heart. No one knows about my past. I am not able to tell you. me to divulge it. Fawn wrote the 29-year-old Fawn. Since then the three authors have taken up the challenge. Many have deified and even abused Fawn, while others have tried to pinpoint the cause. It isn't because there's not enough evidence but they're rather contradictions. This is the task--to separate the primary source from third-hand plagiarism and to fit Mormons' claims with the non-Mormons' in the context of a credible historical narrative. It is fascinating and informative. This is the kind of task to which Fawn Brodie dedicated herself professionally. Her writings and research helped bring her fame around the world: Thaddeus Stephens. The Devil drives (1959). The Story of Sir Richard Burton (1967) Thomas Jefferson. A Personal History of Richard Nixon (1974), in posthumously.
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