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Andrew Krivak is an award-winning writer whose books include The Bear, a Banff Mountain Book Competition winner, Massachusetts Book Awards winner, and National Endowment for the Arts Big Read selection, as well as the freestanding novels of the Dardan Trilogy: The Sojourn, a National Book Award finalist and winner of both the Chautauqua Prize and Dayton Literary Peace Prize; The Signal Flame, a Chautauqua Prize finalist; and Like the Appearance of Horses, a Library Journal "Best Book of the Year" and Indie Next List for Reading Groups selection. He lives with his wife and three children in Somerville, Massachusetts, and Jaffrey, New Hampshire.
Praise for The BearNEA Big Read selection
Mountain Book Competition Winner
Massachusetts Book Awards Winner
Chautauqua Prize Finalist
Joyce Carol Oates Prize Longlist
Julia Ward Howe Book Award Finalist“The Bear is a luminous book of
a standard one sees perhaps once every generation. . . . As [it]
tenderly breaks your heart, piece by piece, it fills that void with
something powerful and timeless. Written with precision, clarity,
and gentle fluidity, The Bear reminds us that all we need to know
awaits us in the wild.” —Pete Takeda, Mountain Book Competition
Jury citation“This fable about seeking harmony with nature by
Earth's last human inhabitants—a father and daughter—has lessons of
love, loss, family and survival.” —Massachusetts Book Awards jury
citation“Lyrical. . . . Gorgeous. . . . Krivak’s serene and
contemplative novel invites us to consider a vision of time as
circular, of existence as grand and eternal.” —Washington
Post“Arresting, exquisite. . . . The Bear is more than a parable
for our times, it’s a call to listen to the world around us before
it’s too late.” —Observer“Beautiful. . . . So loving and vivid that
you can feel the lake water and smell the sea. . . . A perfect
fable for the age of solastalgia.” —Slate“[A] tender apocalyptic
fable . . . endowed with such fullness of meaning that you have to
assign this short, touching book its own category: the
post-apocalypse utopia.” — Wall Street Journal“A powerful allegory
about the struggles and graces of life.” —America Magazine“A
beautiful, gripping, thought-provoking exploration of human
rewilding and nature’s dominion.” —Winnipeg Free Press“With
artistry and grace . . . Krivak delivers a transcendent journey
into a world where all living things—humans, animals, trees—coexist
in magical balance, forever telling each other’s unique stories.
This beautiful and elegant novel is a gem.” —Publishers Weekly
(starred review)“A moving post-apocalyptic fable for grown-ups. . .
. Ursula K. Le Guin would approve.” —Kirkus Reviews (starred
review)“Engagingly different. . . . Unfolds in graceful, luminous
prose.” —Library Journal (starred review)“[Krivak’s] sentences are
polished stones of wonder. . . . The elegiac tone reflects what is
lost and what will be lost, an enchantment as if Wendell Berry had
reimagined Cormac McCarthy’s The Road.” —Booklist“The power of a
classic myth. . . . Krivak’s lyrical tribute to the natural world
and the necessity for humans to coexist with it is an essential
message cloaked within an allegory of haunting beauty.” —Shelf
Awareness for Readers“A lovely, unforgettable experience.”
—Foreword Reviews“In spare and lovely prose, Andrew Krivak folds
the deep past and the far future into a remarkable fable about our
inheritance as humanity makes a harmonic return to the spirit and
animal worlds. This book follows you, like a river under ice.”
—Adam Johnson, author of The Orphan Master’s Son and Fortune
Smiles“A tight yet expansive novel in prose so vivid you forget
these are words and not the cedar, trout, and stones of a
post-Anthropocene Earth. Through the middle of The Bear walks an
unnamed girl whose determination to go on living will fill you with
awe.” —Salvatore Scibona, author of The End and The
Volunteer“Reading The Bear will bring you back to the wonder-filled
stories of childhood, the sort that linger, that alter our
understanding of the world, that shape who we become. Such is the
simple and profound power of Krivak’s unexpectedly hopeful novel.
Crafted with as much care and mastery as the finest oaken bow, this
is a book that manages to be both timeless and urgent, clear-eyed
and tender-hearted, archetypal and unconventional: a bedtime tale
told by a prophet. A wonder in itself.” —Josh Weil, author of The
New Valley and The Age of Perpetual LightMore Praise for Andrew
Krivak“Some writers are good at drawing a literary curtain over
reality, and then there are writers who raise the veil and lead us
to see for the first time. Krivak belongs to the latter.” —National
Book Award judges’ citation“[Krivak’s] sentences accrue and swell
and ultimately break over a reader like water: they are that supple
and bracing and shining.” —Leah Hager Cohen“Incandescent.” —Marlon
James“A writer of rare and powerful elegance.” —Mary Doria
Russell“Destined for great things.” —Richard Russo“[A] singular
talent.” —Jesmyn Ward“An extraordinarily elegant writer, with a
deep awareness of the natural world.” —New York Times Book
Review“[Krivak] bring[s] out the vast compassion, humanity and love
of his rich, fully developed characters.” —Star Tribune“Krivak’s
story and characters are mythic.” —Booklist (starred review)“Krivak
has his own voice, given to lyrical observations on the nature of
human existence.” —Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
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