Fawn Mckay
Fawn McKay's birthplace was Ogden Utah on September 15 1915. Fawn MCKAY, who was born into the Mormon Church's First Family, employed her creative talents and expertise in research to write the intriguing biographical psycho-historical study of Joseph Smith. Published in 1945 with the title: No Man Knows My History, she used both. The title of this book was an inspiration for a funeral sermon delivered in 1844 by Church of Latter-Day Saints founder Joseph Smith. The sermon declared: "You do not know the person I am, and have never seen my heart." My past is not known to anyone. I can't tell. Fawn 29, who was 29 was a writer. Fawn has taken his place as a writer since that day. Many have abused him some have deified him; a few have tried their hands at clinical diagnosis it is not the fact that these documents lack information, however they're in complete contradiction. This is the task--sifting out the firsthand evidence from the third-party plagiarism and fitting Mormon-and non-Mormon-narratives into a cohesive mosaic of reliable historical facts. This is both exciting and instructive. FawnBrodie took on this professional task with enthusiasm and energy. Thaddeus Stewards was the outcome of her research and writing has made her a known writer. "The Devil's Drive" (1959) The Slaughter of the South. Thomas Jefferson. A Personal History of Richard Nixon (1974) as well as posthumously Richard Nixon.





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