Jennifer Appel Popular Books

Jennifer Appel Biography & Facts

The rescue of Sea Nymph was the United States Navy's safe recovery of two crew from the sailboat Sea Nymph, which had been adrift in the Pacific Ocean for more than five months. In May 2017, sailor Jennifer Appel and landsman Tasha Fuiava left Honolulu with their two dogs aboard a fully stocked and equipped Sea Nymph. According to the women, on their first night afloat, their boat took damage from a "force 11 storm"; further damage was inflicted by a typhoon, leaving the boat functionally adrift and incommunicado. Tiger shark attacks, a white squall, and Fuiava's inexperience supposedly caused further problems for the four. Almost six months after leaving Hawaii, Sea Nymph was spotted by a Taiwanese fishing vessel, and though Appel would later claim the larger boat was attacking theirs, she was able to use their satellite phone to contact the United States Coast Guard for help. USS Ashland (LSD-48) arrived to rescue Appel, Fuiava, and their dogs, but left Sea Nymph adrift after determining it to be unseaworthy. After their rescue and the media attention it garnered, the two-woman crew of the erstwhile Sea Nymph were questioned about many aspects of their story. Experts in sailing, meteorology, Hawaiian seamanship, and marine biology, as well as the Coast Guard and the Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office disputed claims made. Appel continued to stand by their statements. If unrecoverable, she could not collect Sea Nymph's insurance, though the ship was spotted still afloat about four months later. Background Jennifer Appel (born 1968 or 1969) and Tasha Fuiava (born 1990 or 1991) were residents of Hawaii, and met in December 2016. Within a week of meeting, they had planned an 18-day trip, sailing to Tahiti— Appel was an experienced sailor while Fuiava was a novice. Appel wrecked her first boat, a 35-foot (11 m) fiberglass sloop, in 2012. Sea Nymph is a 50-foot (15 m) sailboat, and was stocked with two desalinators as well as non-perishables such as "beef jerky, oatmeal, rice, pasta, dried fruits, [and] nuts". The boat was also equipped with a properly registered, fully operational emergency position-indicating radiobeacon (EPIRB). Adrift Appel and Fuiava were residents of Honolulu, living with two dogs (Zeus and Valentine) aboard their sailboat Sea Nymph. The women said they set sail from Hawaii on May 3, 2017 for an 18-day, 2,700-mile (4,300 km) voyage to Tahiti, but encountered a "force 11 storm" (winds between 56–63 knots (104–117 km/h; 64–72 mph), waves from 37–52 feet (11–16 m)) that same night. This initial storm lasted three nights and three days. Four days later, the boat's spreader broke. The pair considered returning to Hawaii, but did not because they believed the harbors at Maui and Lanai were not deep enough to accommodate Sea Nymph. Further problems occurred, including tiger shark attacks, damage to their engine and mast, and malfunctions in their radiotelephone and Iridium satellite phone. Lacking communications, Sea Nymph failed to avoid a typhoon with 100–150-mile-per-hour (160–240 km/h) winds and 40-foot (12 m) waves. The women headed for Kiribati, but couldn't land due to the broken communications equipment. The Cook Islands were their next target, but a white squall and Fuiava's inexperience pushed them further west. On October 1, Sea Nymph came within two miles (3.2 km) of Wake Island, and the women aboard managed to contact officials there. However, the boat was on the wrong side of the island to receive assistance, and both the swell and winds were pushing them westward, preventing them from looping around. Rescue On October 24, 900 miles (1,400 km) southeast of Japan, Sea Nymph was spotted by a Taiwanese fishing vessel. Initial reports say the Taiwanese notified the United States Coast Guard (USCG) in Guam, and began towing the lost boat, compromising its hull. Once they knew rescue was on its way, Appel and Fuiava began broadcasting a mayday. Appel later changed this part of her story, saying the Taiwanese ship had instead attacked Sea Nymph by intentionally failing to keep the appropriate towing distance and colliding with the much smaller vessel: "The Taiwanese fishing vessel was not planning to rescue us […] They tried to kill us during the night." Appel claimed she was able to use the Taiwanese satellite phone and alert the USCG of all this because nobody aboard the Taiwanese ship spoke English. USS Ashland (LSD-48) was on a routine deployment nearby, and arrived on October 25 at 10:30 a.m. Rescuing the two women and two dogs at 1:18 p.m., the Navy determined Sea Nymph to be unseaworthy and left the boat adrift off the coast of Asia. Appel and Fuiava were given "medical assessments, food, and berthing arrangements" aboard Ashland until the ship could deliver the four to its next port of call: White Beach Naval Facility, a US Naval base in Okinawa. In a press conference aboard Ashland, Appel stated that, "Had they not been able to locate us, we would have been dead within 24 hours". Upon arriving in Okinawa on October 30, Zeus and Valentine were quarantined while Appel and Fuiava recovered at the US consulate in Naha. Inconsistencies Asked about the unused EPIRB by CNN, United States Coast Guard (USCG) PO2 Tara Molle said, "I can't speculate as to why they wouldn't have activated it." On 31 October, Appel said that they didn't activate the EPIRB because their boat was still seaworthy; "EPIRB calls are for people who are in an immediate life threatening scenario […] It would be shameful to call on the USCG resources when not in imminent peril and allow someone else to perish because of it." She followed this up saying, "Had we known our calls were going nowhere — we would have used the EPIRB — but hindsight is 20/20". On November 8, Appel told Today's Matt Lauer that after activating the EPIRB, it would have taken emergency services 4–24 hours to arrive; the USCG disputed such a delay, citing "cases in remote Alaska where a ship in distress just using one form of beacon brought a fairly quick response from nearby fishing boats and the Coast Guard." Appel defended their decision saying, "we took our chances with the man upstairs, who gave us grace and allowed us to still be here today." After she amended her version of events with the alleged Taiwanese attack on Sea Nymph, Appel said she eschewed the EPIRB because it would have immediately alerted the Taiwanese captain, as opposed to her telephoning Guam and relaying her emergency in English. Appel and Fuiava said they encountered a "force 11 storm" on May 3. Though the National Weather Service in Hawaii issued a small craft advisory for the ʻAlenuihāhā and Pailolo Channels that day, it recorded "no organized storm systems near the Hawaiian Islands on the dates of May 3, 2017 or the few days afterward." Not only is the claim that Maui and Lanai harbors could not accommodate Sea Nymph untrue, but Hawaiʻi has multiple such places to dock. .... Discover the Jennifer Appel popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Jennifer Appel books.

Best Seller Jennifer Appel Books of 2024

  • A Benjamin Franklin Reader synopsis, comments

    A Benjamin Franklin Reader

    Walter Isaacson

    A selection of Benjamin Franklin’s writings, with an introduction and commentary by renowned author Walter Isaacson.Selected and annotated by the author of the acclaimed Benjamin F...

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    The House of Mirth

    Edith Wharton

    A literary sensation when it was published by Charles Scribner's Sons in 1905, The House of Mirth quickly established Edith Wharton as the most important American woman of letters ...

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    Silenced

    Ann Claycomb

    A powerful fairy tale of four women each cursed by the same abusive man. Gripping and essential, it will captivate readers of Ninth House by Leigh Bardugo, Heather Walter's Malice ...

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    The Book of Pet Love and Loss

    Sara Bader

    A powerful collection of quotations by writers, leaders, and legends on the pain of losing a pet and overcoming grief.An animal’s love is deep, uncomplicated, unconditional, and fo...

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    A Quiet Garden

    Jenny Couzens

    A short picture book, detailing the transformation of a disused WW2 Radar building into a quiet garden, on a caravan site in Suffolk.

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    EnJoy Today

    Jennifer Lyn King

    Every day brings its share of difficulties and hardships, and each day also brings its share of joy and beauty. It is in the choice between the two, on which we will focus upon, th...

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    Bad Apple

    Laura Ruby

    "If I really wanted to open up, I'd confess that I really am the liar everyone believes I am."Highschool junior Tola Riley has green hair, a nose ring, an attitude problem, and a f...

  • Bloom synopsis, comments

    Bloom

    Delilah S Dawson

    A sweet sapphic romance takes a deadly dark turn in this sharpasaknife novella with the slow build menace of Angela Carter's The Bloody Chamberfrom a New York Timesbestselling auth...

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    Kai and his Grandmother

    Jennifer

    A book made from a Finnish grandson’s beautiful artworks and accompanying stories written by his Australian grandmother during a time when they were unable to physically visit each...

  • The Code Breaker -- Young Readers Edition synopsis, comments

    The Code Breaker -- Young Readers Edition

    Walter Isaacson

    Walter Isaacson’s #1 New York Times bestselling history of our third scientific revolution: CRISPR, gene editing, and the quest to understand the code of life itself, is now adapte...

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    Leonardo da Vinci

    Walter Isaacson

    The #1 New York Times bestseller from Walter Isaacson brings Leonardo da Vinci to life in this exciting new biography that is “a study in creativity: how to define it, how to achie...

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    The Last Thing He Told Me

    Laura Dave

    Don’t miss the #1 New York Times bestselling blockbuster and Reese Witherspoon Book Club Pick that’s sold 3 million copies strongnow an Apple TV+ limited series starring Jennifer G...

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    Steve Jobs

    Walter Isaacson

    Walter Isaacson’s “enthralling” (The New Yorker) worldwide bestselling biography of Apple cofounder Steve Jobs.Based on more than forty interviews with Steve Jobs conducted over tw...

  • The Code Breaker synopsis, comments

    The Code Breaker

    Walter Isaacson

    A Best Book of 2021 by Bloomberg BusinessWeek, Time, and The Washington PostThe bestselling author of Leonardo da Vinci and Steve Jobs returns with a “compelling” (The Washington P...

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    Benjamin Franklin

    Walter Isaacson

    In this authoritative and engrossing fullscale biography, Walter Isaacson, bestselling author of Einstein and Steve Jobs, shows how the most fascinating of America's founders helpe...