Fawn Mckay
Fawn McCay Brodie, birthplace in Ogden Utah September 15, 1915. She was a member of the Mormon Church's very first family, Fawn McKay directed her ingenious creative writing skills and impressive researching skills in the creation of an amazing psycho-historical account of Joseph Smith, published in 1945. The book was titled The Only Man knows My History. The title was inspired by the title of a sermon that Joseph Smith delivered in 1844. He shocked his hearers with his words: "You are not my friend and have not heard my voice. My story is not known to anyone. It's impossible to tell. Fawn has written the 29-year-old Fawn. From that point the three authors have taken on this challenge. A lot of them have denigrated him and others have praised him, Some have attempted to make a clinical diagnosis it is not just that the documents do not exist, but however they are fiercely contradictory. The task is to sort out first-hand testimony from third hand plagiarism and fitting Mormon-and non-Mormon-narratives into a cohesive mosaic of reliable theology. This is fascinating as well as fascinating. It's a task which Fawn Brodie put her professional energy into. Thaddeus Stevens. Stevens became immortalized through her works and the fruit of her research. The Devil drives (1959). Thomas Jefferson. Richard Nixon, An Intimate history (1974), posthumous.





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