A speck in the sea A story of survival and rescue

John Aldridge

Book - 2017

"In the dead of night on July 24, 2013, John Aldridge was thrown off the back of the Anna Mary while his fishing partner, Anthony Sosinski, slept below. As desperate hours ticked by, Sosinski, the families, the local fishing community, and the U.S. Coast Guard in three states mobilized in an unprecedented search effort that culminated in a rare and exhilarating success" -- dust jacket flap.

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Subjects
Genres
True adventure stories
Published
New York, NY : Weinstein Books [2017]
Language
English
Main Author
John Aldridge (author)
Other Authors
Anthony Sosinski (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
x, 262 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781602863286
  • Acknowledgments
  • Prologue
  • Chapter 1. Overboard
  • Chapter 2. Montouk Fishermen
  • Chapter 3. A Speck in the Sea
  • Chapter 4. "He's Not Here"
  • Chapter 5. Daylight
  • Chapter 6. In the Command Center
  • Chapter 7. "We're in Big Trouble"
  • Chapter 8. "Johnny Load is Missing"
  • Chapter 9. To the West-End Buoy
  • Chapter 10. Command and Control
  • Chapter 11. The Landward Watch
  • Chapter 12. Cutting Loose
  • Chapter 13. Found
  • Chapter 14. "It's Over"
  • Chapter 15. Saved
  • Chapter 16. The Good Daughter
  • Chapter 17. Postscripts and Parties
  • Epilogue
  • Appendix A. Assets Deployed to Find and Rescue John Aldridge
  • Appendix B. "The Tale of Johnny Load"
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

The authors, friends since they were seven years old, were co-owners of a lobster boat, the Anna Mary. In July 2013, while they were fishing in the Atlantic off Montauk, New York, the 45-year-old Aldridge was trying to move a heavy object on the deck of the boat when he accidentally fell over the side. His partner, Sosinski, and their mate were asleep below. In minutes, Aldridge was alone in the ocean, in the middle of the night, with the frightening awareness that no one might even know he wasn't aboard the Anna Mary for several hours. He was rescued about 12 hours later, having used his boots as flotation devices. This absolutely riveting book follows the increasingly desperate (and, at times, disorganized) rescue efforts as well as Aldridge's own odyssey (How does a man facing near-certain death keep himself believing he might survive?). A movie is already in the works, but don't wait for it the book is as captivating as any film might be.--Pitt, David Copyright 2017 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

A Long Island fisherman spends 12 hours bobbing like a buoy in the Atlantic Ocean in this hair-raising true story. Childhood friends Aldridge and Sosinski, who co-own the lobster boat Anna Mary, detail their incredible story, which took place 40 miles off the coast of Montauk in the summer of 2013. The trip began just like any other, with the authors, along with third crew member Mike Migliaccio, setting out their traps aboard the 44-foot commercial fishing boat Anna Mary the evening of July 22, 2013. In the early hours of July 23, as Sosinski and Migliaccio slept, Aldridge fell overboard while recalibrating the boat's new refrigeration system. Told from multiple viewpoints, the book takes readers into the water with Aldridge as he shares first-person accounts of shark encounters and the mind games he played while clinging to his rubber boots to stay afloat. Sections written in the third person recount the immense battle the U.S. Coast Guard, search-and-rescue aircraft, and a slew of volunteers (including singer Jimmy Buffet) waged against time to find Aldridge before the ocean claimed him. A rich backstory-including complicated personal lives and deep family histories-adds depth to this page turner. (May) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Review by Kirkus Book Review

A fishing trip turns into a very bad day in this dramatic though less fraught rejoinder to The Perfect Storm.When he fell from Anna Mary, his lobster boat, into the seathe result, as he ruefully notes, of an avoidable bad ideaAldridge writes that he spent some of his time in the water pondering the "if-onlys and I-should-have-dones that would have kept me from going overboard." The rest of the time he spent pondering how to keep from falling asleep and slipping into oblivion while trying to gain a fix on where he was in the water. A skilled seaman, he did so, and his knowledge as much as his strength and good physical condition was responsible for keeping him alive for the hours he was in the water. Meanwhile, as his shipmate Sosinski writes, the crew of the Anna Mary and the Coast Guard used knowledge of their own to locate that lone swimmer in the vastness of the waters off New England. Recounting a real event that took place nearly four years ago, the partners' narrative has its predictable moments, just as one might expect: the regrets, those what-ifs, etc. But, though by-the-numbers in spots, this book has several virtues. For one, like Peter Matthiessen's Men's Lives, it is a robust portrait of working-class Montauk, the Long Island community in the shadow of the tony Hamptons that always seems to be in danger of being crowded into the sea. "The real Montauk is about the fishing," they write. "It always was." For another, the authors offer a richly detailed but not overburdened view of how sea rescue operations are mounted and conducted: there are probabilities and formulas involved but also gut instinct and lots of experience in play. A capable and readable book, though the story is likely to draw its true audience by way of the forthcoming movie it ties into. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.