Fawn Mckay
Fawn McKay was born in Ogden Utah on September 15 1915. Fawn MacKay, a Mormon member of the Church Latter-Day Saints' first line of family she paired her dazzling writing skills with her impressive researching skills to publish the dazzling psychohistorical book, No Man knows My History, which was published in 1945. The title comes from the funeral sermons of Joseph Smith, creator of the Church of Latter-Day Saints. His audience was shocked by his proclaiming: "You don't even know my name. There is no way to know my feelings." My story is not known to anybody. There is no way for me to reveal it. Fawn was a 29-year-old Fawn. From that point the three authors have taken up the challenge. Numerous have accused him of being a liar, and others even deified him. While a couple have even tried their hand with a diagnosis made by a doctor. It's not that documents are lacking however they are fiercely contradictory. This task is to delineate accounts from third-hand plagiarism and to blend Mormon claims with the non-Mormons' in a mosaic of credible history. It's exciting and educational. FawnBrodie took on this challenge professionally. Her research and writing rewarded her with world-wide fame: Thaddeus Stevens. The Devil Drives (1959) Scourge of the South Thomas Jefferson. An Intimate The Story of Thomas Jefferson (1974) and posthumously Richard Nixon.





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