An Evening with Andrew Krivak and "The Bear"
Schedule
Sat May 02 2026 at 06:00 pm to 09:00 pm
UTC-06:00Location
2200 Pioneer Ave, Cheyenne, WY, United States, Wyoming 82001 | Cheyenne, WY
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You've read The Bear, now meet the author! Join us as we conclude One Book, One Laramie County with a very special event featuring Andrew Krivak. This community event will include a reading from the book, a discussion with audience Q&A, and a book signing. Let's come together and connect through shared reading, thoughtful dialogue, and the power of story. Andrew Krivak is the author of five novels, two chapbooks of poetry, and two works of nonfiction. His 2011 debut novel, The Sojourn, was a National Book Award finalist and winner of both the Dayton Literary Peace Prize for fiction and the inaugural Chautauqua Prize. He followed The Sojourn with The Signal Flame (2017), a novel The New York Times said evoked “an austere landscape, a struggling family, and a deep source of pain” in Krivak’s fictional Dardan, Pennsylvania. His third novel, The Bear (2020), received the Banff Mountain Book Prize for fiction and is a National Endowment for the Arts Big Read title. Like the Appearance of Horses (2023), returns to the characters and landscape of Dardan. Of the work, Asako Serizawa observed: “Andrew Krivak’s Homeric novel is at once intimate and sweeping, expanding an epic story set into motion in The Sojourn. Tenderly attentive to all that is given and taken by war, Like the Appearance of Horses is a graceful, heroic accomplishment that speaks to the costs of duty when violence is as constant as the Pennsylvania mountains that anchor and separate this indelible family we’ve come to know so personally.” His fifth novel Mule Boy is forthcoming with Bellevue Literary Press in 2026.
As a poet, Krivak has published the chapbooks Islands (1999), and Ghosts of the Monadnock Wolves (2021). He is also author of the memoir A Long Retreat: In Search of a Religious Life (2008), and editor of The Letters of William Carlos Williams to Edgar Irving Williams, 1902-1912 (2009), which won the Louis Martz Prize for scholarly research on William Carlos Williams.
He holds an MFA in poetry from Columbia University, an MA in philosophy from Fordham, and a PhD in literary modernism from Rutgers University. Krivak lives with his wife and three children in Somerville, Massachusetts, and Jaffrey, New Hampshire.
He is currently the visiting lecturer in creative writing at Harvard University.
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Where is it happening?
2200 Pioneer Ave, Cheyenne, WY, United States, Wyoming 82001Event Location & Nearby Stays:
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