An ancient hero’s feats and foibles echo through a modern middle schooler’s life…as they do, for those who can see.
Actually, 12-year-old Hercules can see better than most as he walks each morning through his Cape Cod neighborhood to a dune to watch the glorious sunrise and bid hello to his parents—killed a year and a half before in a traffic collision. What he doesn’t see, at least at the outset, is how he’s going to manage a school assignment that requires him to find personal parallels to each of the labors of (as he puts it) “Hercules the Myth.” Schmidt assembles a strong, perceptive supporting cast, including a girlfriend; older brother Achilles’ fiancee, probably, no, definitely a vampire; a “wicked cool dog”; and a legion of teachers led by the hard-nosed ex-Marine who dishes out that seemingly impossible assignment. The book covers an eventful year marked by the endless chores required to keep the family’s garden nursery going and an equally relentless tide of emergencies, rescues, and terrifying encounters with feral cats and coyotes. Hercules’ eye-rolling “Oh boy oh boy” becomes as much a running punchline as a caustic comment. It’s all punctuated by moments of laugh-out-loud hilarity, emotionally enriched by quiet, incisive bonding, and chock-full of insights about how old stories continue to speak to human nature and character, showing that Schmidt remains at the top of his game. Main characters read White.
At once an epic journey toward self-discovery and a wonderfully entertaining yarn.
(Fiction. 9-13)