In Megan E. Freeman's 2021 late middle grade to early young adult novel in verse Alone Freeman's text (or rather her expressive and emotionally poignant free verse poetry) tells how twelve year old main protagonist and first person narrator Madeleine (Maddie) Albright Harrison (and yes, Maddie is indeed named after former secretary of state under Madeleine Albright, that she is twelve years old at the beginning of Alone, has just turned fifteen when the story ends and also experiences puberty and menstruation during the course of Alone) has seemingly thought of the perfect plan for a secret sleepover with her two best friends Emma and Ashanti, namely that the trio will meet at her grandparents’ summer apartment (with Maddie's mother thinking she is staying with her father and her father thinking Maddie is staying with her mother). And although the clandestine sleepover ends up not happening, Alone has Maddie deciding to stay the night at her grandparents' apartment anyhow, but when she wakes up the next morning, Megan E. Freeman textually shows Maddie Harrison being trapped in an absolute nightmare. For in the middle of the night, the entire town of Millerville, Colorado except for Maddie was mysteriously and forcefully evacuated due to a supposedly imminent but not really ever specifically stated and explained threat (with her family gone and Maddie also totally unaware of the mass evacuation because she had turned off her phone). Therefore, with her parents believing that their daughter is safe and sound with the other and that there is equally no way to contact them and tell them the truth, Maddie is indeed all alone and has been left behind in the evacuated and depeopled Millerville (and since everyone had to for some reason surrender their phones as well, when in Alone Maddie dials her family and her friends, she can actually and frustratingly hear their phones ringing from the bin where they had thrown their phones and thus knows there is now no way of reaching them at all, that she is cut off and has to survive and live in Millerville by herself).
So with no one to rely on, with no internet access, no working phone lines, and pretty soon no electricity and no running water either, Maddie Harrison in Alone slowly learns to survive on her own (and yes, I both adore and appreciate her inventiveness regarding shelter, procuring food, drink, using the nearby lake to bathe, her courage and especially that Maddie also makes ample and regular use of the Millerville public library) and with Maddie's only companion being George, being her neighbour’s Rottweiler (whom she rescues since pets have also been abandoned and whose description in Alone absolutely and totally makes me hugely smile since this all reminds me oh so much and oh so nostalgically of our own family Rottweilers, and in particular regarding George's loyalty to and his affection for Maggie, his tendency to be brave regarding coyotes etc. but a bit of a coward regarding thunderstorms and the like). And indeed, as in Alone days turn into months and months then turn into years, Maddie is shown by Freeman facing and surviving natural disasters, looters, wild and feral animals, but that her biggest enemy is actually the crushing loneliness and the hopelessness from fearing she will never see her family and her friends again (something that I understand but also kind of underestimate a bit, since for me, loneliness and being solitary would not be as much of an issue and an obstacle as the basics for and of survival, that as an introvert and as someone who feels like pretty much an alien in my own family, sorry, but Maddie's homesickness for her family in Alone, it feels just a wee bit problematic and also makes me get a bit envious as well, but well, that is just something entirely personal and also takes nothing away from Alone as a story).
Alone is a fast-paced coming-of-age and survival story and that Megan E. Freeman's novel in verse format also makes reading very fast but thankfully also without sacrificing either emotionality or nuanced deepness, this being something that also very pleasantly surprises me since I am not always a fan of novels in verse. But yes, Freeman (in my opinion), she with Maddie Harrison's character and voice definitely makes Alone totally textually work, and that my only very mild complaint regarding Alone is that when at the end of the story, the imminent threat is shown to have been a complete fabrication and huge government conspiracy, this should in my opinion be depicted a bit more thoroughly and not just be pointed out in seven short lines, that the ending for Alone feels a bit rushed and lacking (so that therefore, my final rating for Alone will be four and not five stars, although I do highly and warmly recommend Alone and that I am also currently reading the companion novel Away).