Book Club Discussion Questions
For supplemental discussion material see our Beyond the Book article, and our BookBrowse Review of Three Cups of Tea.
Please be aware that this discussion guide will contain spoilers!
Introduction
Three Cups of Tea is the true story of one of the most extraordinary
humanitarian missions of our time. In 1993, a young American mountain climber
named Greg Mortenson stumbles into a tiny village high in Pakistan's beautiful
and desperately poor Karakoram Himalaya region. Sick, exhausted, and depressed
after a failing to scale the summit of K2, Mortenson regains his strength and
his will to live thanks to the generosity of the people of the village of Korphe.
Before he leaves, Mortenson makes a vow that will profoundly change both the
villagers' lives and his ownhe will return and build them a school.
The book traces how Mortenson kept this promise (and many more) in the high
country of Pakistan and Afghanistan, despite considerable odds. The region is
remote and dangerous, a notorious breeding ground for Al Qaeda and Taliban
terrorists. In the course of his work, Mortenson was kidnapped and threatened
with death. He endured local rivalries, deep misunderstandings, jealousy, and
corruption, not to mention treacherous roads and epic weather. But he believed
passionately that balanced, non-extremist education, for boys and girls alike,
is the most effective way to combat the violent intolerance that breeds
terrorism. To date, Mortenson's Central Asia Institute has constructed
fifty-five schools, and his work continues.
Mortenson initially approached Karakoram as a climber and he never lost the
mountaineer's appreciation for the region's austere beauty and incredible
physical challenges. His coauthor David Oliver Relin deftly evokes high-altitude
landscapes haunted by glaciers, snow leopards, and the deaths of scores of
climbers. As Mortenson transformed himself from down-and-out climbing bum to the
director of a humanitarian enterprise, he came to appreciate more and more
deeply the struggles that people of the region endure every daystruggles that
have intensified with the recent explosion of war and sectarian violence.
In the course of this narrative, readers come to know Mortenson as a friend, a
husband and father, a traveling companion, a son and brother, and also as a
flawed human being. Mortenson made enemies along the way and frustrated his
friends and family. Relin does not shy away from depicting the man's
exasperating qualitieshis restlessness, disorganization, sleeplessness, and
utter disregard for punctuality. But Mortenson never asks others to make
sacrifices that he has not already made himself time and time again.
The war-torn mountains of Pakistan and Afghanistan appear in the news as the
breeding grounds of terrorist training camps, Al Qaeda hide-outs, and fierce
religious extremism. In
Three Cups of Tea, Mortenson and Relin take
readers behind the headlines to reveal the true heart and soul of this explosive
region and to show how one man's promise might be enough to change the world.
Discussion Questions
- There is a telling passage about Mortenson's change of direction at the
start of the book: "One evening, he went to bed by a yak dung fire a
mountaineer who'd lost his way, and one morning, by the time he'd shared a
pot of butter tea with his hosts and laced up his boots, he'd become a
humanitarian who'd found a meaningful path to follow for the rest of his
life." What made Mortenson particularly ripe for such a transformation? Has
anything similar happened in your own life?
- Relin gives a "warts and all" portrait of Mortenson, showing him as a
hero but also as a flawed human being with some exasperating traits. Talk
about how Relin chose to write about Mortenson's characterhis choice of
details, his perspective, the way he constructs scenes. Is Mortenson someone
you'd like to get to know, work with, or have as a neighbor or friend?
- At the heart of the book is a powerful but simple political message: we
each as individuals have the power to change the world, one cup of tea at a
time. Yet the book powerfully dramatizes the obstacles in the way of this
philosophy: bloody wars waged by huge armies, prejudice, religious
extremism, cultural barriers. What do you think of the "one cup of tea at a
time" philosophy? Do you think Mortenson's vision can work for lasting and
meaningful change?
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- How does the author develop themes of identity and belonging throughout the narrative?
- What role does the setting play in shaping the characters' decisions and relationships?
- Discuss how the ending reframes the events of the story. Were you surprised?
Unless otherwise stated, this discussion guide is reprinted with the permission of Penguin Books.
Any page references refer to a USA edition of the book, usually the trade paperback version, and may vary in other editions.