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5 kirjaa tekijältä Hazel Phillips

Solo

Solo

Hazel Phillips

Massey University Press
2022
pokkari
One afternoon in Auckland, journalist Hazel Phillips decided to close her laptop and head for the hills. She then spent the next three years living in mountain huts and tramping alone for days at a time, all the while holding down a full-time job. As she ranged from Arthur's Pass and the Kaimanawa Forest Park to the Ruahine Range and Fiordland, she had her share of danger and loneliness, but she also grew in confidence and backcountry knowledge. Her story of this solo life is an absorbing blend of adventure and humour, combined with her research into tales from the past of ambition and death in the mountains. She also casts a feminist eye over the challenges women climbers and explorers faced. Full of pluck, courage and resourcefulness, this book is for all those who long to wade through emerald rivers and breathe the mountain air.
Choose the Sex of Your Baby

Choose the Sex of Your Baby

Hazel Phillips; Hazel Chesterman-Phillips

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
1998
pokkari
This practical guide shows readers a natural method of choosing the sex of a baby. It gives advice on health, diet, sperm count and ovulation in an easy-to-follow manner. The testimonies of numerous parents throughout the world reflects the success of the author's method.
Mission and Motherhood: The Hidden Sacrifice: A Snapshot of Yakusu Missionary Mothers

Mission and Motherhood: The Hidden Sacrifice: A Snapshot of Yakusu Missionary Mothers

Hazel Phillips; Derek Browne; Mary Taylor

Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2013
nidottu
To Go or Not to Go?To support my husband in his life's work in a country far away? Or to stay in our own country to care for our children?This was the dilemma facing many twentieth century Congo missionaries who were both wives and mothers. There would usually be little choice as to their decision. A wife was expected, and she herself expected, to support her husband wherever his career or vocation took him. Missionaries' own children would generally have to be found alternative homes or be sent to boarding school. The mothers would not only have to endure the consequent family separation but also misunderstanding and personal guilt. 'Mission and Motherhood' recounts and reflects upon the true stories of four Yakusu missionary mothers who bore this personal sacrifice with courage, dignity and discretion.