Fawn Mckay
Fawn McCay, born at Ogden Utah September 15, 1915. Fawn, a member of the Mormon Church's longest-running family, combined her literary talents and exceptional research abilities into an outstanding biography of Joseph Smith. No Man knew My History appeared in 1945. The title is derived from an 1844 funeral sermon preached by Joseph Smith, the Church of Latter-Day Saints' founder. Nobody has been told about my story. No one knows my history. Fawn (29 years old) said that, after her confessional moment, three-hundred writers have risen to the event. Many have abused him some have deified him; some have even experimented with clinical diagnosis it is not the fact that these documents lack information, it is rather that they're wildly contradictory. The process of collating these papers--of sorting first-hand information from third-party plagiarism and integrating Mormon and non-Mormon narratives to create a picture that is an authentic history. It's both thrilling and informative. FawnBrodie devoted herself to the profession. The fruits of her research and writing immortalized her with worldwide fame. Thaddeus Stevens. "The Devil's Road" (1959) The Southern Scourge. Thomas Jefferson. Richard Nixon, An Intimate historical account (1974) The posthumous.





Comments
Post a Comment