DEATH:
Hey there, living people. Welcome to Post Mortem, the fake online talk-radio show where fictional characters talk to me about their books, their Authors, and basically anything they want. I’m your host, Death.
Hey there, living people. Welcome to Post Mortem, the fake online talk-radio show where fictional characters talk to me about their books, their Authors, and basically anything they want. I’m your host, Death.
Today’s guest is the
protagonist of LOSS, book three of the Riders of the Apocalypse, by Jackie
Morse Kessler.
[GLANCES AT CUE CARD] School Library Journal says, “Kessler
blends fantasy, history, humor, and hard reality into a gripping tale.” Booklist says, “Kessler’s third
book in the Riders of the Apocalypse series stays true to the initial premise
of exposing a teen affliction—this time bullying—by providing an allegorical
analysis of its effects and offering hope to its sufferers.” And New York
Times bestselling author Sophie
Jordan calls LOSS “Gritty and raw with powerful truths. An addictive read.”
Living people,
give a warm welcome to Billy Ballard!
[APPLAUSE]
Hey, Billy!
BILLY:
Yeah. Um. Hey.
[LOOKS AROUND] Where are the others?
DEATH:
BILLY:
You know. War.
Famine. The other Riders of the Apocalypse.
DEATH:
They’re
riding. Sort of in the job description.
BILLY:
[BLINKS] You
told me we were getting together for a game of Bridge.
DEATH:
I might have
lied.
BILLY:
[SIGHS]
DEATH:
If I’d invited
you to be interviewed about being the hero of LOSS, would you have accepted?
BILLY:
Wait, let me
think about it. No.
DEATH:
So I lied. And
here you are.
BILLY:
Terrific.
Anyone ever tell you what a role model you are? No? Wonder why that is…
DEATH:
A dead man
once said that the ends justified the means.
BILLY:
[SIGHS, SINKS
INTO CHAIR] All right. Let’s do this. You said you’re interviewing me about
LOSS? That’s…
DEATH:
Rather meta.
BILLY:
Well. Yeah.
Well. Yeah.
DEATH:
In your own
words, what is LOSS about?
BILLY:
I’d been
bullied pretty much all my life, but it wasn’t until I became Pestilence, the
White Rider of the Apocalypse, that I learned how to fight back.
DEATH:
What was worse
for you: being bullied, or being Pestilence?
BILLY:
Being bullied.
DEATH:
‘Splain, please.
‘Splain, please.
BILLY:
Before LOSS, I
can’t tell you the last time when I could walk down a block or down a hallway
at school and not hope to God no one was waiting to trip me, or push me, or
worse. I was constantly tense, always expecting the worst, because nine times
out of ten, the worst happened. The laughter. The shove from behind. The nasty
names. It sucked. I made myself sick from worry.
DEATH:
Literally or
figuratively?
BILLY:
Both. My mom
made me see doctor after doctor because I was constantly sick. Stomachaches,
mostly. And even when I wasn’t sick, I tried to fake it. If I had to go to
school, I’d spend hours planning what routes to take, when to run down the
hall, how to avoid Joey Glass and his bruiser buddies. I’d dress to be
invisible.
DEATH:
Even when you
stayed home, you weren’t exactly in a safe haven, were you?
BILLY:
I wish. My
grandfather’s suffering from Alzheimer’s, and we can’t afford to have him be in
a home where people can take care of him properly all the time. So he lives
with us. My dad left us way before Gramps got sick, so it’s just me and Mom.
She’s stuck working two jobs just to keep up with the bills, so I have to be
Gramps’s caregiver. And that’s a nightmare.
DEATH:
Why?
BILLY:
When he’s
lucid, it’s not so bad. Then he’s just like a little kid, you know? I have to
feed him and clean up after him and make sure he doesn’t hurt himself. I draw
the line at changing his adult diaper, though.
DEATH:
Understandable.
Understandable.
BILLY:
But when Gramps
isn’t in his right mind, he’s dangerous. He’s hit me. He’s bitten me. He’s
accidentally started fires. He’s walked out of the house, and we’d have no idea
where he’d gone. This one time, he almost got hit by a car.
DEATH:
Almost only counts in horseshoes and hand grenades.
Almost only counts in horseshoes and hand grenades.
BILLY:
Yeah? Next time, you be the one who saves him from getting run over.
Yeah? Next time, you be the one who saves him from getting run over.
DEATH:
I’m not really in the market to save people from dying. So compared with your normal life, being Pestilence wasn’t so bad.
I’m not really in the market to save people from dying. So compared with your normal life, being Pestilence wasn’t so bad.
BILLY:
Whoa, I never
said that!
DEATH:
That’s what it sounds like. Normal life meant getting bullied and babysitting your grandfather. And lusting after your best friend Marianne, who you were too nervous to ask out.
That’s what it sounds like. Normal life meant getting bullied and babysitting your grandfather. And lusting after your best friend Marianne, who you were too nervous to ask out.
BILLY:
Hey! That’s
private!
DEATH:
Sorry. Mind-reading thing. Your normal life wasn’t fun.
Sorry. Mind-reading thing. Your normal life wasn’t fun.
BILLY:
But being the White Rider was worse.
But being the White Rider was worse.
DEATH:
How so?
BILLY:
You were
there. You saw what I did when I had the Bow in my hands that first time. You
saw what happened because of it, what I did to… [SHAKES HEAD] No, I’m not going
to talk about it.
DEATH:
There is such
a thing as a learning curve, you know.
BILLY:
Not when
people get sick and maybe die if I mess up!
DEATH:
Consider it
incentive not to mess up.
BILLY:
[GRUMBLES] I really hate your point of view.
[GRUMBLES] I really hate your point of view.
DEATH:
It comes from
being around for thousands and thousands of years. Did anything good come out
of what happens to you in LOSS?
BILLY:
Well…yeah.
Lots of things. [SMILES] Amazing things. I learned something important about
myself, something that made me stop feeling like a victim. And then there’s the
last chapter.
DEATH:
What about it?
BILLY:
[GRINS] It’s
my favorite chapter. Wow, this is really meta, isn’t it?
DEATH:
Told you so. Speaking
of which, were there any parts of LOSS
where you were like, Jackie Morse Kessler, what on earth are you making me do?
Or were you and your Author in sync the entire time?
BILLY:
I don’t like
violence. But if I ever meet Jackie, I’m going to get seriously violent with
her.
DEATH:
[CHUCKLES] You
sound more like War than Pestilence.
BILLY:
Seriously,
Jackie is vicious. She hurts her characters. A lot.
DEATH:
I think that makes her a sadist. Or, you know, an Author. If you could change any part of LOSS, what would it be?
I think that makes her a sadist. Or, you know, an Author. If you could change any part of LOSS, what would it be?
BILLY:
Everything. [TICS OFF POINTS ON FINGERS] I
wouldn’t have been bullied from the time I was a little kid, my grandfather
wouldn’t have gotten Alzheimer’s, I would have had the courage to tell my best
friend Marianne that I liked her more than just as a friend…
DEATH:
For the record, this time you’re the one bringing up Marianne.
For the record, this time you’re the one bringing up Marianne.
BILLY:
[CONTINUING]…and
I never would have gone with you when you came knocking at my door!
DEATH:
You didn’t
have to help me, you know.
BILLY:
You sort of
didn’t give me a choice.
DEATH:
It’s not like
I held a scythe to your throat…
BILLY:
Dude. You’re
Death. Capital D. I wasn’t about to talk back to you, or slam the door in your
face.
DEATH:
[LAUGHS] Yeah,
that was in War’s book, not yours.
BILLY:
What? War
slammed the door in your face?
DEATH:
Sort of.
BILLY:
[GRINS]
Awesome.
DEATH:
If you say so.
If LOSS were to go the way of Hollywood ,
who would play you?
BILLY:
Someone who
looks like me, not too tall, not too short, not too anything. You know, someone
who looks real, not like a celebrity. I don’t really have an actor in mind.
DEATH:
What about me?
BILLY:
You’re a dead
ringer for Kurt Cobain. So someone who looks like Kurt Cobain.
DEATH:
If there’s one piece of advice you can give to your fans, what would it be?
If there’s one piece of advice you can give to your fans, what would it be?
BILLY:
You’re stronger than you
know. Believe it.
DEATH:
Words to live
by. Finally, who’s your favorite Rider of the Apocalypse?
BILLY:
What, you mean
between you, War, and Famine? You.
DEATH:
[SMILES] I
sense flattery…
BILLY:
Dude. You
could kill me with a thought. Until that changes, you’re my favorite Rider.
Period.
DEATH:
Heh. Got to
love self-preservation.
Living people,
give another warm round of applause to the protagonist of Jackie Morse
Kessler’s novel LOSS…Billy Ballard!
[APPLAUSE]
You can buy LOSS
at the Book Depository, your favorite local indie, Barnes & Noble and
Amazon.
Thanks for tuning in to
Post Mortem. Until next time, go thee out unto the
world. Rock on!
Giveaway:
- 1 Copy of Loss
- Ends August 10, 2012
Rules:
- To Enter, fill out the Rafflecopter form below
- Must be 13 years of age or older
- Contest is open to US ONLY!!!
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- Do NOT put your email in the comment section
- Check out my Contest Policy
Good Luck and Happy Reading!
I love this interview. And I love how it's set up as if it's a radio show. So awesome! Thank you so much for being a part of the tour and hosting this amazing author!
ReplyDeleteAnd I totally agree, her books are awesomesauce!
Thanks so much for inviting me to be part of the tour! :)
ReplyDeleteI am absolutely in love with Death. In each book he just gets better! <3 <3 And great interview!
ReplyDelete