He set out for two days. He came back 438 days later ? alone.
In November 2012, Mexican fisherman José Salvador Alvarenga and his young deckhand launched from the coast of Chiapas for a routine trip. Then came the storm. Their engine failed. The radio died. The horizon disappeared.
What followed was the longest recorded survival at sea in human history ? 438 days drifting more than 6,000 miles across the Pacific Ocean.
This isn't a tale of adventure. It's a testament to madness, endurance, and faith ? the true story of a man who refused to vanish:
- Catching and eating raw fish, turtles, and seabirds with bare, torn hands
- Drinking rainwater, turtle blood, and urine to stay alive
- Speaking to his dead crewmate for days before surrendering him to the waves
- Marking moon cycles and currents to hold on to sanity
- Battling hallucinations, starvation, and the ocean's silence
From the first shattered wave to the final miraculous landfall in the Marshall Islands, 438 Days Adrift is a haunting real-life odyssey ? a journey through despair, faith, and the unbreakable will to live.
Scientists doubted him. Reporters investigated. National Geographic confirmed the impossible ? and the world finally believed.
438 Days Adrift will grip you from the first page and leave you asking:
If one man can survive 14 months lost at sea... what could you survive?