Fawn Mckay
Fawn McKay's birthplace was Ogden Utah on September 15 1915. She was a member of the Mormon Church's first family Fawn McKay directed her ingenious literary talents and remarkable research skills to creating the brilliant psycho-historical biography of Joseph Smith, published in 1945 under the title The Only Man knows My History. The title was in response to a funeral address that was delivered by the Church of Latter-Day Saints founder Joseph Smith. The sermon declared: "You do not know what I'm about and you've never seen my heart." My history is not known to anyone. I'm not able to tell my story. Fawn, a 29-year-old woman said: "Since that moment of candor, at least three writers have picked up the task." Some have attacked him, others have praised him, some have even attempted to make a diagnostics. It's not the fact that these documents lack information, the issue is that they're wildly contradictory. It's not an easy task to assemble these documents and separate first-hand stories from copies that are third-hand and integrating Mormon accounts with those of non-Mormon people to form a cohesive collection. is exciting and enlightening. Fawn Brodie's career was committed to this cause. Thaddeus Stevens. Stevens is immortalized in her work and the fruits of her studies. "The Devil's Drive" (1959) The Slaughter of the South. Thomas Jefferson. Richard Nixon, An Intimate historiography (1974), posthumous.





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