Fawn Mckay
Fawn McCay Brodie, birthplace in Ogden Utah September 15, 1915. 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 literary geniuses and extraordinary expertise in research to compose the brilliant, psycho-historical, biographical work of Joseph Smith. It was published in the year 45 with the name, "No Man Knows My History". This title is derived from a funeral sermon given by the founding father 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. Nobody knows my story. In reality that I'm not sure. Wrote the 29-year old Fawn at the time: Ever since this moment of honesty, at least three-score writers have picked up the challenge. These documents are not lacking, they just contradict each with respect to each other. The task of assembling the documents, of separating firsthand accounts from third-hand plagiarism of fitting Mormon as well as non-Mormon stories into a mosaic that makes plausible historical claims. It is fascinating and informative. This is the kind of task to which Fawn Brodie devoted herself professionally. Her research and writings made her famous all over all over the globe: Thaddeus Stephens. "The Devil's Road" (1959) The Slaughter of the South. Thomas Jefferson. A personal biography of Richard Nixon (1974) as well as posthumously Richard Nixon.





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