Sweet Sorrow
Dallas Voice Article -- January 6, 2006
By Arnold Wayne Jones
Staff Writer
Life doesn�t necessarily imitate art for Kimberly LaFontaine, but the two are inextricably linked.
By day, LaFontaine (a pen name) works as a crime reporter for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. Angie, the main character of �Picking Up the Pace� � which LaFontaine wrote � is a reporter at a daily newspaper in Fort Worth. LaFontaine is lesbian and her best friend was a wisecracking gay man. Angie becomes involved in a lesbian relationship and is friends with a sassy gay man.
But, she says, many of the similarities between author and creation end there.
�I did that because I wanted to write about what I know,� she says. �But I dramatized everything.�
That license included having Angie go undercover in Tarrant County�s underbelly to find out who is ordering the murders of homeless people � a bit of derring-do that the author herself would never attempt, she says.
The resulting suspense-romance novel already has LaFontaine�s publisher anxious for a follow-up. Not bad for a 26-year-old who graduated from college slightly more than a year ago.
LaFontaine�s rise from aspiring novelist to published author was remarkably short. She began writing the book in the summer of 2004 � about the same time she started an internship at the Star-Telegram and while still enrolled at the University of Texas at Arlington. Within six months, she completed the novel.
She started looking for a publisher by scouring the Internet and reading up on resources for writers.
�But the publishers that popped up in this genre seemed stuffy, with submission guidelines that seemed very restrictive,� she says. �I thought there had to be more out there.�
LaFontaine finally came upon Intaglio Publications in Florida, a young company that had already signed some of her favorite authors. And unlike many other publishing houses, Intaglio�s only real requirements were �that it�s in the lesbian genre and it contains good writing,� she explains.
Intaglio agreed to publish the book, and within six months, it hit the shelves. (�Picking Up the Pace� is currently available on Amazon.com, but should be available at bookstores in North Texas shortly.) After the release last October, LaFontaine was dancing on air.
Only a few weeks later, however, her joy turned bittersweet.
One of the central characters in the book is Jimmy, a gay guy who used to be one of Angie�s sources. LaFontaine makes no bones about this character being based on one of her closest friends, Sam Lea.
�If you change Jimmy�s profession, name and age, then you have Sam,� she says. �I used to steal all of Sam�s quirky and sarcastic comments. I would give each chapter to Sam as it was finished and he thought it was the funniest thing.�
They used to joke that LaFontaine employed so many of Lea�s witticisms in the book, she�d have to pay him a fee as co-author.
�I told him I�d buy him a present with the royalties, and he said he wanted black leather chaps,� she says. �Obviously, I can�t do that now.�
Lea was the UTA student that police found murdered on Halloween.
LaFontaine�s voice chokes with emotion when recalling her friend and inspiration. They met three years ago in a photojournalism class, and both soon worked at The Shorthorn, UTA�s student newspaper. �He forced me to go to class. He�d come down to the office and grab me by the arm. Sometimes he�d have to bribe me with a coffee of something. It was good for me,� she says.
Her affection for Lea led her to base a character on him. She even recognized Lea in the book�s acknowledgements as �funny and sarcastic as hell � but terribly honest.�
Lea�s homicide two weeks after the release has been especially rough on LaFontaine, who �almost had a wreck� when she drove by his apartment the night his body was discovered and saw police cruisers and crime-scene tape.
She intends to donate �a chunk of money� to Lea�s scholarship fund at UTA once her royalty checks begin rolling in. Until then, she�s busy working on a sequel, �Preying on Generosity.� But even that is colored by her strong feelings about Lea.
�I can�t do the sequel without Jimmy, so it�s tough. I think every author loves their first book because it�s their first book. But mine is that much more special because Sam is in it so much,� she says.
Still, LaFontaine is proud that she was able not just to celebrate Lea�s life, but also the lives of gay Texans like the ones she knows.
�I wanted to give my publishers a lesbian book set in our area because there aren�t a lot. Believe me, I looked,� she says. �I also wanted to give some insight into what it�s like to be a journalist because a lot of people have misconceptions. And I wanted to give a story that was written with less flowery writing and a faster pace. I like that it�s a quick read from which you can walk away after three hours and still remember the characters.�
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