HELENA, Mont. -- Author Jon Krakauer doesn't like to make public appearances, so there will be no book tour to promote his latest work, "Missoula: Rape and the Justice System in a College Town."

Instead, he plans to make one public appearance Wednesday night in Missoula, Montana, where he'll face angry critics who say his decision to focus on the small town is unfair.

Krakauer said Tuesday he wanted to give those critics the chance to confront him about the book.

"It took me by surprise that people were so upset by the title," Krakauer told The Associated Press. "It seemed like a perfect example of a problem that exists nationwide."

"I never meant to hold Missoula up as the worst case. It's not," he added.

"Missoula," which ranks fourth on the New York Times' hardcover nonfiction best-seller list, uses the small Montana city to illustrate what he calls a nationwide problem faced by rape victims to convince police and prosecutors to pursue their cases.

The book focuses on several University of Montana women who were assaulted between 2010 and 2012, the same period covered in a U.S. Department of Justice investigation into whether Missoula and university officials mishandled rape reports. The federal probe led to reforms in how the university and city respond to sexual assaults.

Critics have denounced Krakauer, the author of the best-selling books "Into Thin Air" and "Into the Wild," for turning the spotlight on Missoula and accuse him of reopening wounds inflicted by the Justice Department investigation. Others criticize the book as a one-sided account that doesn't include the voices of the prosecutors he depicts as failing the rape victims.

Krakauer said he tried to get comment from Missoula County Attorney Kirsten Pabst, but he stopped when her attorney threatened him with a lawsuit. He said he would welcome Pabst and others from the county attorney's office to the forum, saying he has questions he would like to ask them.

Pabst did not return a call for comment.

Krakauer said he did not know what kind of reception to expect in Missoula, but that he hoped the forum would "clear the air."

"I get it. Missoula takes a lot of pride in the town - as Missoulians should - and this book was seen as an attack on the integrity of the town, which it is not," Krakauer said.

His focus on the town came after he started following rape cases across the nation, Krakauer said. He decided that the subject could be turned into a book after traveling to Montana to hear the impressive testimony of one of the victims he profiles, he said.

The forum, which was organized by Fact and Fiction Bookstore owner Barbara Theroux, will consist of University of Montana School of Journalism Dean Larry Abramson interviewing Krakauer and asking him questions from the public submitted in advance.

"I hope that some of the healing and some of the good things that have already started in Missoula ... can continue to be discussed and that victims will continue to feel their support in the community to report incidents," Theroux said.

Abramson declined to detail what questions he would ask Krakauer, but he said he wants to find out why the author picked Missoula and why he chose to speak to the people he did. He credited Krakauer for traveling to Missoula to participate.

"I think if people feel a little less uncomfortable about the fact that this book was dropped on the town, and at least he came to explain himself, that would be a worthwhile goal to me," Abramson said.