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E

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Alex woke to find herself alone. There were no bodies, no zombies, no remnants of a speedy evacuation. Everyone had just gone, and all that remained was a world that neither needed nor wanted her.

E. is about a 13-year-old girl called Alexandra E. Monroe who wakes up one day to find that every single human being has vanished and that London, where she lives, is blanketed in eerie silence. Alex waits—it’s what her mum always told her to do if she ever got lost—but no one comes.

She opens the front door and ventures out into an alien landscape. One without humans. There are no bodies and no remnants of a frantic evacuation. No signs of a battle, no deadly airborne virus, and no zombies trying to kill her. All the people are just gone, vanished in one night.

In those first weeks, she searches for other survivors. She eventually finds a measure of acceptance in her new reality. She will never be happy, but she can be numb. One question always remains, though. Was it all a manmade disaster, an act of god, or did everyone simply leave without telling her?

All the while, the world begins to heal itself from the effects of man. Without a mutant human species to pollute and disrupt it, nature starts to find frequency and balance again.

Why had Alex survived, and what possible reason was there for her to live on in a world that neither needed nor wanted her?

329 pages, Kindle Edition

Published February 11, 2018

15 people are currently reading
20 people want to read

About the author

Fraser Small

2 books

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Karen Siddall.
Author 1 book117 followers
August 14, 2020
A great new young adult post-apocalyptic story with a surprising twist!

Alexandria E. Monroe, “E” to her friends and family, woke up that morning expecting a school day like any other. But as she headed downstairs for breakfast, her mother wasn’t in the kitchen or anywhere in the house. Guessing she was making a quick trip to the shops, E settled down to a bowl of cereal and didn’t worry about it. However, as their regular time to leave for school came and still no sign of her mother, she felt the first little niggling of worry begin, especially when she found her mom’s cellphone left behind in the living room. Too far to walk to school, she was left to hang out at home and watch some television, but then the power went out. When her best friend never contacted her to find out why she wasn’t in school, she really began to wonder what was going on. No one had posted to social media since the day before. No one: the friend, the police, nor the fire department answered their phones. E fell asleep that night on the stairs watching the door and waiting for her mother to return.

When she couldn’t stand not knowing what was going on any longer, E ventured out of the house and headed down to the village. For the first time, she noticed how quiet it was. Everywhere. Not a car, a plane, no noise. That’s where she realized she was completely and utterly alone.

E is a great new young adult post-apocalyptic story with a surprising twist. It follows the main character, E, over a three year period starting when she’s a young 13-year-old to just after her 16th birthday. I thought the author did a great job portraying her as a typical but sheltered teen as she goes through so many stages of loss, grief, and other emotions all on her own. Of course, she changes over the course of the book under the weight of this loss and apocalyptic event, and she uses what talents she has to survive when everyone she knows and loves goes missing. I liked how she went to the local library to research how to do whatever she needed to have done. I liked that the author chose for her to have a hearing impairment, which emphasized how London’s ambient sounds changed so drastically with the removal of human activity.

The action is set in London and the surrounding areas, and I enjoyed the incorporation of recognizable places and things in the story. Even small things like the inclusion of the Oyster card for the turnstiles made this more realistic. Seeing what happens to these known places has its own poignancy.

Because there are no people for E to interact with, the author relies on flashbacks and a series of notes from her fun-loving Uncle Robert to skillfully move the story forward. Animals take on a significant role in E’s new reality. As I read, I couldn’t help but compare what was going on with E emotionally to how people are reacting to the current COVID-19 safeguards, many of whom have found themselves in isolated circumstances, or at least with much-reduced contact with friends, family, or coworkers. As E mentions in the book, her ability to deal with her total lack of others may have been her strength, she was singularly prepared to survive this better than anyone she knew due to her isolation from schoolmates as a child with a disability.

I highly recommend E by Fraser Small to readers of young adult post-apocalyptic fiction. It is well-written, easy-to-read, and held my attention until the very last page. Although I didn’t agree with every choice the main character makes, I certainly understood and rooted for her every exciting step of the way. There is a twist to the story, unlike similar stories I’ve read, and it adds to the enormity of the story’s vast unknown.

I voluntarily reviewed this after receiving a free copy.

579 reviews4 followers
July 12, 2021
One morning after waking, our young person realized her mother wasn't answering. And she couldn't be found. And after going outside, there wasn't anyone out there either. Nobody. Nothing.
Where did everyone go?
She could not find any dead people either. There were some dead animals, but nothing else. And the air was getting cleaner. Things were quiet.
She got scurvy after awhile, but started taking vitamins and that cleared up eventually. She came across a zoo early on and felt bad for the animals She moved around a little and chose some other places to live, thinking she might find others.
And other stuff too.
A good thought provoking read. Makes you wonder about all the bad and good mankind does to the planet, the environment, and to each other.
Profile Image for Thistle.
1,098 reviews19 followers
August 12, 2023
Not poorly written, but in need of a story editor. End of the world, blah blah blah, one girl left alone, everyone else vanished. I've read that same plot a hundred times before. She lived close to an Amazon distribution center though, so that was a new twist. The author spent way too much time on unimportant parts of the story, and eventually I just lost interest.
Profile Image for Jackie.
3,956 reviews128 followers
May 22, 2022
Not your usual post apocalyptic tale as our main character is a 13 year old named Alexandra Eve Monroe, Alex or E for short.

Spanning 3 years this book is set in the UK, mostly in London.

Alex has to be the most unique character have read about in this genre.
4 reviews
August 27, 2023
Thought provoking. Hard to put down.

You follow a young girl as she learns to cope with being the only one left, but you are kept wondering what happened?? I couldn't put it down.
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