Etude: New Voices In Literary
Non-Fiction
Winter 2007 (
Reviewed by LiDońa Wagner
“I wrote the story. But Greg Mortenson lived it.” David
Relin tells us in the introduction to Three Cups of Tea. Right off the bat, he
informs the reader that Mortenson is a flawed being whose fluid sense of time
nearly drove Relin to abandon writing the book. But he also admits to being won
over by what Mortenson has accomplished in
After his brief introduction to Three Cups of Tea, Relin
disappears. Unlike author Tracy Kidder in
The award-winning journalist moves the narrative seamlessly
back and forth between
Relin weaves in Mortenson’s
back-story – he spent his first fourteen years in East Africa and later trained
to be a nurse and a mountain climber – but the narrative arc follows the
decade-long journey by which Mortenson turned his failure to reach the summit
of K2 in the Karakoram range of the Himalayas into a commitment to building
schools, especially for girls.
Of the many people other than Mortenson involved in building
rural schools, Relin elevates only one to the level of another full-blooded
character; Mortenson’s mentor Haji
Ali. Haji Ali is nurmadhar
of the Muslim village into which Mortenson stumbled after he lost his way
descending
Time after time, the illiterate Haji
Ali transmits wisdom to his protégé. Wisdom that, unlike Carlos Castenada’s mentor, does not take Mortenson on wild
shamanic journeys, but instead keeps him grounded in the realities of Pakistani
life, such as the ritual of drinking tea. Christened Dr. Greg by those whom he
blesses with his medical knowledge, Mortenson journeyed from stranger to guest
and, finally, to a family member whom others will defend to the point of death.
http://etude.uoregon.edu/winter2007/books/tea.html
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