Fawn Mckay
Fawn McKay Brodie was born in Ogden Utah on September 15 1915. Fawn, a member of the Mormon Church's longest-running family, merged her writing abilities and outstanding research skills into an outstanding biography of Joseph Smith. No Man knew My History appeared in 1945. The name was taken from the sermon title that Joseph Smith delivered in 1844. In the sermon, he shocked his hearers with the statement: You don't know me, and you have never heard my heart. Nobody knows my past. My history is not known by anyone. Fawn was a 29-year-old Fawn. Since then, at least three writers have risen to the task. There are some who have made an attempt to create a diagnostic diagnosis. Documents do not lack, but they are contradictory. The task is to sort out the firsthand evidence from the third-party inconsistencies and integrating Mormon-related narratives into a cohesive mosaic of reliable theology. This is exciting and also instructive. FawnBrodie took on this professional task with enthusiasm and energy. Her writings and research brought her fame around the world. Thaddeus Stephens. The Devil drives (1959). The life of Sir Richard Burton (1967) Thomas Jefferson. Richard Nixon, An Intimate history (1974) Posthumous.





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