Fawn Mckay
Fawn McKay's Brodie was born Ogden Utah on September 15 1915. Fawn McKay, educated in the Mormon First Family of the Church employed her creative talents and ability to research skills to compose 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. This title is derived from the funeral sermon preached by the founder of the Church of Latter-Day Saints in 1844, when he shocked the congregation with his words"You don't know me" you never knew my heart. I don't know my history. No one knows my history. Writes the 29-year-old Fawn in this moment of honesty, about three dozen writers have stepped up to the plate. Certain people have attempted to claim that he is godlike or godlike, while some have accused him of being an obfuscator. Some even tried an invasive diagnosis. It's because the documents do not exist. They're simply contradictory. It is a daunting task to put together these papers--of sorting first-hand information from third-party plagiarism that is able to fit Mormon and non-Mormon accounts into the form of a coherent historiography. It's exciting and educational. Fawn brodie was a professional dedicated in this endeavor. Thaddeus Stewards, which was the outcome of her writing and research, made her a world well-known writer. The Devil drives (1959). Thomas Jefferson. A Personal History of Richard Nixon (1974), posthumously.
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