✰ 4.5 stars ✰
“Wait a minute. All twelve?”
“All twelve.”
“Isn’t one of those Labors going down to hell?”
“There and back,” said Lieutenant Colonel Hupfer. “As I indicated to Ms. de la Peña, it’s a tough world, Beal.”
He leaned down over me and whispered, so quietly that no one else could hear, “But I think you already know that.”
I looked at him.
“Not that I care,” said Lieutenant Colonel Hupfer.”
To quote Hercules Beal's favorite expression, 'oh boy, oh boy', I never expected The Labors of Hercules Beal to be such a truckload of fun and feels as it was. When Hercules Beal is given the herculean task of performing Hercules' Twelve Labors into his real life for his year-long English assignment, while also learning about all the challenges the mythical Hercules had to face, he, too discovers the important things about friendship and family and himself, along the way. 🙏🏻
“The strangeness of these myths is how often they subtly enact themselves in our lives. But we notice them only when we’re watching closely—as I hope you will be, because with watching will come recognition, and with recognition, understanding of their relevance.”
Hercules is a bright young boy, who lost the light in his life, when his parents died and his brother had to come back to help run the family business. It didn't help that, due to newly implemented division regulations, he now has to attend Cape Cod Academy for Environmental Sciences - a twenty-two minute walk from his home. But with new changes, come new people - with new people, come new experiences. And with new experiences, come new life lessons, one which Hercules probably might have never experienced, if not for his new 7th grade homeroom teacher, Lieutenant Colonel Hupfer.
“They did it in gratitude for what you and your brother have done for the Academy, and in support of you especially, because you are our student.
We are here to help you carry the sky when you have to, and we are here to help you put it down when you need to.
Why else would anyone ever become a teacher?”
I loved the creative and unique way in which Gary D.Schmidt brought to life different scenarios that rivaled that of the legendary Hercules. And at the heart of it, as Hercules relayed all the little adventures and escapades, was Lt. Col. Hupfer, a no-nonsense military man to the core, but with the commitment and dedication to enriching students' hearts and minds that rivaled any great teacher. 🥺🥺
And with such subtlety of humor that earned so many light chuckles from me, he was able to bestow words of wisdom and compassion to Hercules, as he not only responded in kindness to his plights, but helped him open his eyes to the world around him. All the people of his community - friends, family, neighbors - there was so much love and appreciation and deep connection that was displayed - that they were so fiercely supportive and caring of one other's feelings and plights that made me feel like I was a part of their world, too. 🥹🥹
“Leave it,” I said.
He did. I stayed in my father’s room all night. The doctors and nurses, they left. Even my brother left me alone.
Me and the humming monitor and my father.
I still hear it, that low hum. It plays just beneath awareness—but it is always playing.
It is the soundtrack of my life.”
The beauty of these labors that resonated with me was that through his efforts in trying to fulfill them, Hercules was finally able to grieve the loss of his parents - parents he missed 'like I would miss the sun.' I loved that it never felt forced - I am actually in such awe at how the author created such a perfect balance between the tough emotions and the subtle quiet laughter - that we can feel that he is still grieving - it is so very palpable how he is still inadvertently blaming himself for his parents' death. 😢😢 But, with quiet reproach and gentle prodding, he is reminded that he is not - that the challenges he faces finally gives him a chance to forgive himself and find a way to move on. ❤️🩹❤️🩹
“Your brother told me about how you go out to the Dune every morning to see the sunrise.”
“When did he tell—”
“Parent-teacher conferences.”
“He’s not my parent.”
“I understand that.”
“And he’s asleep when I go out.”
“No, he’s not. He is always watching for you to come back, to make sure you’re okay.”
I sat down. I hadn’t known.
I hadn’t known.”
I loved the relationship between Hercules and Achilles, the older brother who gave up his job to come back home and run Beal Brothers Farm and Nursery. Sometimes you don't have to say 'I love you' to know that they love you. 🥺 The little moments that captured that beautiful bond between the two of them - that they know that they are all that's left of the long line of history of their family tree - that the fear of losing the other can be heard in the unspoken care in which they look out for each other - my heart ate it all up. 🤍🤍 And for Achilles, who returns home to Truro after living all over the world - that ending reveal that captured how 'it takes time to learn to love your home again after you’ve been away,' was very much the icing on the cake. 🥰
This book is a labor of love to read - Middle Grade writing that is simple but still educational, humorous but still heart-felt and honest, and one that delivers a heartwarming sense of familiarity within the community of love and family. 🙏🏻🙏🏻
And on a side note, as someone who did read Hatchet in 6th Grade English back in the early 2000s, it makes me happy to see that even in fictional stories, it is a book that can still be studied in class even now - that it still stands strong as a story worth reading even today. 😊