Fawn Mckay
Fawn McKay's birthplace was Ogden Utah on September 15 1915. Fawn MacKay was a Mormon belonging to the Church of Latter-Day Saints' first family, combined her brilliant literary skills and impressive research skills in order to write the dazzling, psychohistorical autobiography of the author, No Man Knows My History, which was published in 1945. The title came from a funeral sermon delivered by the founder of the Church of Latter-Day Saints in 1844. He shocked those he addressed with the words"You don't know me" You've never met my heart. There is no one who knows my past. My history is not known by anyone. Fawn 29, a woman of 29 years old, said: "Since that moment of sincerity, at the very least three writers have picked up the task." Certain writers have honored and denigrated the man, and others attempt to identify the root of the problem. It isn't that there aren't enough documents but they're rather inconsistent. It's difficult to put these pieces together and to distinguish first-hand stories from third-hand copies and then fit Mormon and non Mormon tales into the form of a cohesive mosaic. It's an interesting as well as educational journey. It's a task which Fawn Brodie devoted herself professionally. Thaddeus Stewards, which was the outcome from her writing and study was what made her a well-known writer. Scourge of the South (1959) The Devil Drives. Thomas Jefferson. An Personal History of Richard Nixon (1974), posthumously.





Comments
Post a Comment