Fawn Mckay
Fawn McKay's birthplace was Ogden Utah on September 15 1915. Reared in the Mormon Church's original family Fawn McKay was able to direct her innovative writing talents as well as her remarkable abilities in research to create the brilliant psycho-historical biography of Joseph Smith, published in 1945 under the title The Only Man Knows My History. The title of this book was an inspiration for a funeral sermon given in 1844 by the Church of Latter-Day Saints founder, Joseph Smith. In his sermon, he said: "You do not know what I'm about and you've never met my soul." My past is not known to anyone. It's impossible to tell. Fawn (29 years old) wrote that she has been honest since the moment she made her statement, three-hundred writers have risen to the occasion. They do not have a lack of documents, they just contradict each other. It's not an easy task to assemble these documents, separating first-hand accounts from third-hand copies and fitting Mormon narratives with non-Mormon ones into a coherent collection. This is exciting and informative. Fawn Brodie's career was committed to this cause. Thaddeus Steves became a worldwide celebrity as a result of her research and her writing. The Devil drives (1959). The Story of Sir Richard Burton (1967) Thomas Jefferson. Richard Nixon and An Intimate historical history (1974).





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