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A New York Times bestseller! Perfect for fans of Hatchet and the I Survived series, this โriveting, immersiveโ ( Kirkus Reviews ) middle grade debut novel in verse from a Pushcart Prizeโnominated poet tells the story of a young girl who wakes up one day to find herself utterly alone in her small Colorado town. When twelve-year-old Maddie hatches a scheme for a secret sleepover with her two best friends, she ends up waking up to a nightmare. Sheโs aloneโleft behind in a town that has been mysteriously evacuated and abandoned. With no one to rely on, no power, and no working phone lines or internet access, Maddie slowly learns to survive on her own. Her only companions are a Rottweiler named George and all the books she can read. After a rough start, Maddie learns to trust her own ingenuity and invents clever ways to survive in a place that has been deserted and forgotten. As months pass, she escapes natural disasters, looters, and wild animals. But Maddieโs most formidable enemy is the crushing loneliness she faces every day. Can Maddieโs stubborn will to survive carry her through the most frightening experience of her life? Review: Great read for teens - My teen loved this book. Different and interesting read. Review: AMAZING BOOK!!!๐ - I love this book!!! The storyline is so interesting and Iโve just started reading the sequel.I definitely recommend you read this.Its great for 10-13 year olds.


| Best Sellers Rank | #3,054 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #1 in Children's Dystopian Science Fiction Books #22 in Stories in Verse #90 in Children's Action & Adventure Books (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 2,141 Reviews |
K**T
Great read for teens
My teen loved this book. Different and interesting read.
L**S
AMAZING BOOK!!!๐
I love this book!!! The storyline is so interesting and Iโve just started reading the sequel.I definitely recommend you read this.Its great for 10-13 year olds.
M**E
Enjoyable, but fast read!
My daughter could not put this down, until she needed to. She was absolutely enthralled with the story, but because she began it at night and the girl was the same age as she, it was a little disturbing for her to think of being left alone (even though we were all in the house with her). She took a break and finished the book in the morning. She really enjoyed it, but because it's written in prose, it's a really fast read. When I asked her to rate it afterward, she said 6 or 7 out of 10. I think just because the whole thing was over so quickly, it didn't give a prolonged enjoyment like a normal book. In any case, a good read, but just know it won't last them long!
E**.
great pre-teen to teenager book
Alone by Megan Freeman is a great book about a tired, rebellious teen that has to switch back and forth between two divorced parents looking for a break. A break that turns out to be a long 3 years alone. I love all the references used in the book to other stories, authors and poetry. I love how the girl uses the library as a constant reference place and continues to read throughout everything going on. I think that writing could be more structured in complete sentences, rather than the choppy thought that are used. The author does a great use of details and figurative language as she writes that allows the reader to easily visualize and story and feel like you are there along with the character. Megan Freeman does a great job at building anxiety through the character and allowing the reader to feel as the character feels in the text. I would rate this book overall a 5 out of 5 stars based on the uniqueness and quality of how the story is told. It seems to be written for children as young as 10 and closer to a 5th grade reading level, but can easily be enjoyed by adults as well!
M**L
Amazing
It is a great book. But I think it is more for 10 years old girls and up.
A**G
Wow
This one starts off with a bang and doesn't let up. I loved seeing Maddie survive on her own and seeing the quiet moments and all of the struggles she went through. There are some dark moments in this book, but it is amazing.
K**E
Intriguing
At first I wasnโt sure, but I kept reading. The words, the story pulled me on. I got caught up and needed to find where it would lead me. At the end I was very glad I read this book. It is good, unlike anything I ever read before!
H**R
Even More Important Than Survival Is...
Almost-thirteen-year-old Maddie is โa ghost in a twenty-first century ghost town,โ after a mysterious event wipes out the entire population Millerville, Coloradoโovernightโin Megan E. Freemanโs ALONE. What happened? How and why was Maddie spared? Will she survive? Will she find her family? Will her family find her? Maddieโs experience really is a kidโs worst nightmare. Narrating through striking, skeletal prose, she discloses details about herself, her family, and her friend, Emma, a fashionistaโwho never told Maddie about her parentsโ pending divorce. โI am on my ownโฆchildhood is over.โ Matter-of-factly, Maddie doesnโt complain. A resourceful and independent bookworm, Maddie โgets to work,โ moving to her dadโs house, stocking up for winter, growing a garden, outwitting hungry coyotes and looters, and overcoming other โimpossible obstacles." It doesnโt take long for Maddie to realize survival is more than food, water, and shelter. She craves the irreplaceable comfort of people. Not even Maddieโs furry companion George can replace the sound of the human voice. There is none like it โin all the world,โ Scott OโDellโs epigraph warns the reader. Maddie wants her mom. Sheโd even settle to be back in math, surrounded by people she โdidnโt even realize [she] loved.โ A flushing toilet lends her a moment of feeling human again. As fall moves into winter, spring, summer, and back into fall, Maddie reads, sleeps, and forges her way through the days. The reader imagines her sitting by the fire, flashlight in hand, journaling in what becomes the book. Between the bindings are words about words. Even the spaces speak. Heaven, Exploration, Peril, Desolation, Acceptance, Reconciliation: ALONE is broken into parts by single, stark terms and their definitions. A postcard, text messages, voicemail, a book report, and a letter to God add depth and dimension to structure and plot. Like an ice crystal in the Colorado winter, the novel catches light, giving color and hope to what it means to be human. Freeman artfully adds hollow beauty to the survival story. Maddieโs whispers trail from the last pages: โThere is only this / the touch of their hands / skin on warm skin / to be held / to be seen / to be heard / to be known / these are the nutrientsโฆโ
E**S
Amazing book
So I never thought I would love a book of prose/ poetry this much. I didnโt realise when I purchased, but I couldnโt put it down. This is how all poetry should be. Amazing. Love the journey she goes on. You really donโt feel like you are not reading a novel. Amazing. About to purchase the second book.
Y**R
Amazing highly recommended
11 year old Daughter absolutely loved this book and shredded a tear at the end. Every time she read abit she would be so excited to come and tell me what happened
L**A
Good book
Great book. Teen loved it!
K**5
Best read this year
Great story. Reads like nothing I've ever read before. A must read!
J**E
Fantastic
I loved this book! Such a great story and a really unusual way of writing. Highly recommended to anyone (not just YA/MG)
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