Mountain Queen The Summits Of Lhakpa Sherpa 202... May 2026
In the village of Balakharka, high in Nepal’s Dolakha district, Lhakpa was born into a yak-herding family with thirteen children. Her mother, Yangji, would wake before dawn to churn butter tea, her hands cracked from wind and altitude. "A daughter is like water," neighbors said. "She flows into another’s home."
The final ridge is the sharpest blade on earth—a corniced edge where one misstep drops you 10,000 feet into Tibet. Lhakpa crawled. She sang a Nepali children’s song, the one she used to hum to Sunny when he had a fever. Her oxygen meter read zero. She kept moving.
Neither does she.
In 2016, at age 42—older, poorer, but infinitely wiser—she stood again at Everest Base Camp. Other teams had bottled oxygen, satellite phones, sponsors. Lhakpa had a secondhand sleeping bag, a pair of cracked boots, and the silent prayers of her children watching from a laptop in Queens.
One morning, after a beating that cracked two ribs, Lhakpa looked at her three children—Shiny, Sunny, and little Tashi—and remembered her mother’s words. She fled. No money. No passport. Just the children and the absolute refusal to break. Mountain Queen The Summits of Lhakpa Sherpa 202...
But the mountain never lies.
The first Nepali woman to summit and survive Everest twice, Lhakpa Sherpa battles treacherous peaks, poverty, and an abusive marriage—not for glory, but to prove that a daughter of the Himalayas can rise as high as any mountain. In the village of Balakharka, high in Nepal’s
For years, Lhakpa lived two lives: by day, a supermarket employee who smiled at customers; by night, a woman hiding bruises under wool sweaters. He took her earnings. He forbade her from climbing. He told her she was nothing without him.