Here we drink three cups of tea to do business; the first you are a stranger, the second you become a friend, and the third, you join our family, and for our family we are prepared to do anything – even die.’
Haji Ali, Korphe Village Chief, Karakoram mountains, Pakistan
In 1993, after a terrifying and disastrous attempt to climb K2, a mountaineer called Greg Mortenson drifted, cold and dehydrated, into an impoverished Pakistan village in the Karakoram Mountains. Moved by the inhabitants’ kindness, he promised to return and build a school. Three Cups of Tea is the story of that promise and its extraordinary outcome. Over the next decade Mortenson built not just one but fifty-five schools – especially for girls – in remote villages across the forbidding and breathtaking landscape of Pakistan and Afghanistan, just as the Taliban rose to power. His story is at once a riveting adventure and a testament to the power of the humanitarian spirit.
Related Listens
- Winners Take All : The Elite Charade of Changing the World – Anand Giridharadas
- We Are Displaced : My Journey and Stories from Refugee Girls Around the World – From Nobel Peace Prize Winner Malala Yousafzai – Malala Yousafzai (Abridged)
- Tough Love : My Story of the Things Worth Fighting For – Susan Rice
- The Room Where It Happened : A White House Memoir – John Bolton
- Mighty Be Our Powers : How Sisterhood, Prayer, and Sex Changed a Nation at War – Carol Mithers, Leymah Gbowee (Abridged)
- Hillbilly Elegy : A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis – J. D. Vance
- Brit(ish) : On Race, Identity and Belonging – Afua Hirsch (Abridged)
- Becoming : The Sunday Times Number One Bestseller – Michelle Obama