Fawn Mckay
Fawn McCay Brodie was was born at Ogden Utah September 15, 1915. She was a member of the Mormon Church's original family Fawn McKay was able to direct her innovative creative writing skills and impressive research skills to creating an amazing psycho-historical account of Joseph Smith, published in 1945 under the title The Only Man is able to know My History. This title comes from a funeral sermon delivered by The Church of Latter-Day Saints' founder. Nobody knows my story. Nobody knows my story. Fawn has written the 29-year-old Fawn. From that point there have been at least three writers who have risen to the challenge. Some have rebuked him, while others have glorified. A few have even made an assessment. Not that the documents are not there, but the fact that they're contradictory. To assemble the documents -and separate the firsthand sources from a third-party plagiarism and finally, to put Mormon and non Mormon narratives together into a credible mosaic is no easy task. It is both fascinating and educational. Fawn Brodie's professional life was devoted to this aim. Thaddeus Stewards, the result of her writing and research, made her a world known author. The Scourge of Southern (1959) The Devil Drives. The life of Sir Richard Burton (1967) Thomas Jefferson. The Intimate Histories (1974) The Life of Sir Richard Burton (1974) and Richard Nixon.





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