Fawn Mckay
Fawn Brodie McKay, born September 15, 1915 was born within Ogden Utah. Fawn MacKay was a Mormon who was part of the Church of Latter-Day Saints' first family, combined her brilliant ability to write and her remarkable abilities to research in order to publish the dazzling psychohistorical biographical work"No Man Knows My History, which was released in 1945. The title comes from a funeral speech delivered by the founder of the Church of Latter-Day Saints in 1844 when he startled those he addressed with the words"You don't know me" I never told you about my heart. My history is unknown to anybody. It's impossible for me to reveal it. I wrote the 29-year old Fawn at the time: Ever since the moment when he spoke, at least three-score writers have taken up the gauntlet. Some people have tried to glorify him or godlike, while some have said he's a liar. Many have even tried an invasive diagnosis. However, the issue is that there are no documents. They're contradictory. It is up to us to separate accounts from the third hand plagiarism and to fit Mormons' claims with the non-Mormons' in an authentic historical mosaic. This is an exciting and educational experience. Such was the task to which Fawn Brodie put her professional energy into. The fruits of her research as well as her writing earned her worldwide fame. Thaddeus Stevens. The Devil drives (1959). The Portrait of Sir Richard Burton (1967) Thomas Jefferson. An intimate Historical Document (1974) as well as posthumously Richard Nixon.





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