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She said criticism of her family "is ungrounded." "They have put up with a ton of stuff to help me follow my dream," she said. Sunderland's young age as she sailed off to her perilous journey has sparked controversy, with some observers wondering if the family isn't pandering to media attention. Her father Laurence, reached by phone late Friday at his home in Thousand Oaks, California, told The Associated Press that the family is thrilled that Abby has arrived safely on Reunion island. "I am absolutely totally over the moon with how quickly the plane and boat reached Abigail. I think the guys did a fantastic job with the rescue and we are so grateful to them," he said. Eventually, Abby Sunderland said, she wants to write a book. And she definitely wants to keep sailing. For now, though, she's most looking forward to getting home. "I hope to have a new brother soon," she said. "And I look forward to seeing my dog." Sunderland had spent the past 10 days on the Osiris as it returned from the Kerguelen Islands, a remote and barren patch of rocks in the ocean toward Antarctica, where she was taken briefly after the rescue.
[Associated
Press;
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