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Eureka: A Novel
 
 
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Eureka: A Novel [Hardcover]

Jim Lehrer (Author)
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)


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Book Description

October 2, 2007
Ever reliable and responsible, Otis Halstead is a father, a husband (one half of a “well-dressed couple of substance”), and the CEO of Kansas Central Fire and Casualty. He has never done anything out of the ordinary. Until now.

The change in Otis starts with an antique toy fire truck, the exact model he had pined for at age ten but never received. Though it is now a collectible costing $12,350, he will buy it–because he can. Next comes a Daisy Red Ryder BB gun, ordered from the Nostalgia Today catalog. A Kansas City Chiefs regulation NFL helmet follows. But Otis’s real coup is the purchase of his one true childhood passion: a red 1952 Cushman Pacemaker motor scooter. For his baffled wife, Sally, this is the final straw. She insists that he see a shrink–a sloppy man with flowing hair who uses terms like “mature men in crisis” and “second childhood syndrome.” Otis is unimpressed–and extremely insulted–by the doctor’s insinuation that his baldness is to blame for his sudden interest in toys.

But it’s not until tragedy strikes uncomfortably close to home that Otis decides he wants out of his sensible, safe life in Eureka, Kansas. And so, a few weeks before his sixtieth birthday, Otis leaves town, heading west on old U.S. 56, a corporate CEO wearing a football helmet, riding a forty-year-old motor scooter, and with a BB gun strapped to the side. One might say he was in for an adventure. Otis would say he was finally about to experience life.

Jim Lehrer has created an acute, laugh-out-loud, and endearing portrait of American middle age. With abundant wit and a sharp sense of the lives most of us lead, Eureka takes us on a journey through the unfulfilled dreams of childhood. In Otis Halstead, Lehrer has created his most brilliant and winning character to date.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Spurred on by the sight of a toy he never received as a child, a restless, aging Eureka, Kans., insurance executive relives his youth with disastrous (and hilarious) results in the 17th novel by Lehrer, prolific writer and PBS NewsHour anchor. Otis Halstead, 59, married father of one, is in the clutches of a midlife crisis spending spree; he dismisses his nagging wife's pleas that he see a therapist and continues buying items he's always dreamed of owning: a miniature fire truck (now a collector's item that goes for $12,000), a BB gun, a football helmet and an antique red Cushman motor scooter. The suicide of disillusioned co-worker Pete Wetmore (who left behind a telling note) provides the impetus for Otis to mount the scooter and leave town. But a steady string of bad luck finds a hospitalized Otis back in Eureka faking a coma to buy time for some heavy, overdue retrospection and one final decision. Calamity gives way to poignancy in this consistently fun story buoyed by an endearing protagonist readers will cheer for. (Oct.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

*Starred Review* Earnest, honest lifelong Kansan Otis Halstead is plodding toward his sixtieth birthday when he impulsively spends $12,000 for a cast-iron toy fire truck he didn't get for Christmas at age five. In short order, he also buys a genuine Red Ryder BB rifle, a Kansas City Chiefs football helmet, and a 1952 Cushman motor scooter. Insurance company CEOs in small-town Kansas simply don't do such things, so his earnest, honest Kansan wife sends him to a psychiatrist. Soon after, he loads the toy fire truck and the BB rifle onto the Cushman, dons his helmet, and heads west. He tells people he meets on the road his name is "Buck." For regular readers of newsman Lehrer's surprisingly extensive oeuvre, a new book is a welcome event; his seemingly artless but actually sly, winsome, and crafty stories always celebrate the ordinary, confront some elemental issue of being human, offer bittersweet elegies for a past that seems better than the present, and give us characters whose essential decency stays with the reader long after the book begins to gather dust on the shelf. Eureka does all of those things. In fact, it may be Lehrer's best novel yet. Gaughan, Thomas

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 228 pages
  • Publisher: Random House; 1 edition (October 2, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1400064872
  • ISBN-13: 978-1400064878
  • Product Dimensions: 5.7 x 0.9 x 8.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,616,799 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

9 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.2 out of 5 stars (9 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A warm, humorous and poignant story, October 17, 2007
By 
Bookreporter (New York, New York) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Eureka: A Novel (Hardcover)
Otis Halstead, a quiet, competent, civic-minded CEO of a Kansas casualty and life insurance company in Eureka, Kansas, is a contentedly married father of a college-age daughter. Just three weeks short of his 60th birthday, he is visiting an antiques toy show when he is suddenly seized by a desire to pay $12,500 for a mint condition toy fire engine exactly like the one he didn't get for his fifth Christmas.

Then, in a catalog on memorabilia, he spots a Red Ryder BB rifle complete with official BBs in its original carton. As soon as it arrives via FedEx Express, he hastily erects a target in the backyard and starts spending his free time pinging away at paper targets until he becomes a crack shot.

Next is an authentic Kansas City Chiefs football helmet that he begins to wear in public because it covers his bald head, making him look younger. By now his wife and friends are becoming concerned about his behavior, and when he disappears one Saturday and returns late that night towing a 1952 Cushman motor scooter on a trailer, that is when they insist he seek professional help. Otis reluctantly agrees to confer with Bob Gilroy, his best friend and a psychologist at a famed Eureka mental health clinic. Bob suggests that he talk to a specialist in "aging male syndrome," but Otis observes that Dr. Tonganoxie is even stranger than he is and decides that the only way to cure his hunger for change is to run away from home.

And so it is that we accompany Otis aboard his red 1952 Cushman motor scooter on his own, within-the-speed-limit version of Jack Kerouac's ON THE ROAD. Jack Kerouac he is not --- there are no pot parties or peeing off the back of freight cars in Otis's journey to adventure. He does not awake after any orgies or with strange women in his bed. No doubt the wildest night is spent in a garage in Church Key Charlie Blue's chocolate fudge factory along Kansas Highway 56, where Otis arrives, bruised and soaked to the skin after an accident in a rainstorm. There begins his odyssey to self-awareness, fraught with danger and pitfalls never encountered on the golf course or at his business man's club.

Jim Lehrer, author of 16 prior novels, has constructed a warm, humorous and poignant story of a nice man who thinks he has everything and discovers that there is more to life than success.

--- Reviewed by Roz Shea
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Who says this is fiction?, January 4, 2008
This review is from: Eureka: A Novel (Hardcover)
For Otis Halstead it's an antique toy fire truck, a Daisy Red Ryder BB gun, a Kansas City Chief's regulation NFL helmet and a 1952 Cushman Pacemaker motor scooter...and a yearning to escape the responsibilities of adulthood. For me, it's a collection of handsigned studio photos of the cowboy stars I grew up with on the black and white screen, also a Daisy Red Ryder BB gun, a Lone Ranger lunch box, a 1949 Ford pick-up truck and a sailboat in which to sail into the sunset. The difference is, Otis acts on his desire to shed the trappings of approaching senior citizen status while I, like probably most, refuse to take that risk. But the very story line, like William Least Heatmoon's, Blue Highways of two decades ago shows man has maintained his yearning to escape, if only temporarily. This book is for the dreamer in all of us.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Good For A Rainy Day, February 18, 2008
This review is from: Eureka: A Novel (Hardcover)
Jim Lehrer's Otis Halstead suffers the midlife crisis many of us are expecting. The difference is, he acts out all the impulses most of us suppress, which makes this fun for those who live vicariously through their reading. Full disclosure: I bought my bb gun when I turned 50.

The quiet, prosperous life of a Kansas insurance executive isn't particularly scintillating. Otis breaks away from the humdrum sometime before his 60th birthday when he dons his KC Chiefs football helmet and putters off into the sunset on his motor scooter with his trusty bb gun strapped to the seat.

His adventures and mis-adventures make for a good rainy Sunday afternoon read.
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Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
sunflower state, toy fire engine
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Johnny Mercer, Bob Gidney, Pete Wetmore, Russ Tonganoxie, Otis Halstead, Red Ryder, Otis Otis, Kansas City Chiefs, Ashland Clinic, Mad Severy, Cushman Pacemaker, New Jersey, Church Key Charlie, Deputy Canton, World War, Great America, Mary Beth, Otis Bob, Eureka Kansas, Johnny Gillette, Sally Otis, Chanute River Bridge, Otis Sally, Turkey Red, Roger Atchison
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