Fawn Mckay

Fawn McKay was born 15 September 1915 in Ogden, Utah. Reared in the Mormon Church's first family Fawn McKay devoted her brilliant writing talents as well as her remarkable abilities in research to create an amazing psycho-historical account of Joseph Smith, published in 1945 under the title The Only Man knows My History. The title of this book was an inspiration for a funeral sermon delivered in 1844 by Church of Latter-Day Saints founder Joseph Smith. The sermon declared: "You do not know the person I am, and have never met my soul." My story is not known to anyone. I can't tell. Wrote the 29-year old Fawn at the time: Ever since that moment of candor at least three-score writers have taken up the battle. Some have deified and abused him, while others attempt to identify the cause. It isn't because there's not enough evidence but rather they are wildly inconsistent. The task is to sort out the firsthand evidence from the third-party inconsistencies and integrating Mormon-related narratives into a mosaic of credible history. It is both exciting and instructive. FawnBrodie dedicated herself to this job. Her research as well as her writing earned her worldwide fame. Thaddeus Stevens. The Devil's Drive (1959) The Slaughter of the South. Thomas Jefferson. The Intimate Histories (1974), and Richard Nixon.

Zendaya Fawn Fawn Fawn Alison

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