One of the greatest gifts of my years at Publishers Weekly was the chance to work with Phyllis Tickle, who founded our religion department at the magazine and had her finger on the pulse of the ...
The Farm in Lucy, Tennessee — As was reported by David Gibson of Religion News Service on May 22, 2015, Phyllis Tickle, the retired founding editor of the Religion department of Publishers Weekly, ...
Phyllis Tickle, Publishers Weekly’s founding religion editor, died September 22, 2015, at her home in Lucy, Tenn., four months after announcing her diagnosis of stage-4 inoperable lung cancer. She was ...
Phyllis Tickle has had a rich career as an author, a respected commentator on the state of religion in America today, and a visionary and futurist for the Church. She turns 80 this year, and the ...
Phyllis Tickle, a best-selling religion author, popular speaker and influential scholar, died at her home in Lucy, Tenn., Sept. 22. She was 81. Her 2008 book, The Great Emergence: How Christianity Is ...
Author Phyllis Tickle, who passed away last week at the age of 81, will be remembered for the way she articulated the struggle going on in Christianity in the early 21st century. She was someone who ...
Phyllis Tickle died yesterday at 81. The writer, editor, and commentator on American religion was diagnosed with stage IV lung cancer early this year. In 2004, Wendy Murray wrote a profile of Tickle ...
Popular author Phyllis Tickle has died after a battle with lung cancer, her family members say. This profile of Tickle by RNS was originally published on May 22, 2015. LUCY, Tenn. (RNS) Over the past ...
The last time I saw Phyllis Tickle was on a lovely spring day in 2015, when I spent several precious hours with her as she spoke publicly (and poignantly) for the first time about the lung cancer that ...
Phyllis Tickle called her near-death experience the closest she ever came to touching the sacred. "It changed every part of what I was," said Tickle, a publisher and writer who for many helped shape ...
LUCY, Tenn. — Over the past generation, no one has written more deeply and spoken more widely about the contours of American faith and spirituality than Phyllis Tickle. And now, at 81, she’s working ...
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