Fawn Mckay
Fawn McKay Brodie was born in Ogden Utah on September 15 1915. Fawn MacKay who was a Mormon who was part of the Church of the Latter-Day Saints' original family she paired her dazzling abilities in the field of literature and impressive abilities to research in order to produce the brilliant, psychohistorical biographical work of the author, No Man Knows My History, which was published in 1945. It's a name derived from an 1844 funeral eulogy given by Joseph Smith. In the speech, he declared: You weren't aware of me or my heart. Nobody knows my story. I'm unable to share it. Fawn published the words of 29-year old Fawn. Since that time there have been at least three writers who have responded to the call. A few have denigrated and used Fawn, while others have attempted to diagnose the problem. There is nothing to suggest that there aren't enough documents but they're rather divergent. It's a daunting task to put these pieces together, to separate first-hand accounts from those of third-hand sources and put Mormon as well as non Mormon tales into one coherent piece. This is an exciting and instructive experience. FawnBrodie embraced this challenge professionally. The results of her study and writing made her immortalized with global fame. Thaddeus Stevens. The Devil Drives (1959) Scourge of the South Thomas Jefferson. An Personal History of Richard Nixon (1974), after the death of Richard Nixon.





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