Our
guest today is Karen Pullen. Karen left a perfectly good job at an engineering consulting
firm to make her fortune (um, maybe not) as an innkeeper and a fiction writer.
Her B&B opened 12 years ago, and her stories have appeared in Every Day Fiction, Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, and Spinetingler. Her story,
“Brea’s Tale,” won a 2012 Derringer Award from the Short Mystery Fiction
Society. Her first mystery novel, Cold
Feet, was released by Five Star
Cengage on January 16. She lives in Pittsboro, NC.
Unlike the wonderful travel posts to Novel Adventurers,
this one is a post about staying put. Because you don’t go anywhere when you
own a bed & breakfast.
Frequently guests at my inn tell me it’s always been
their dream to own a B&B. They love decorating, cooking, gardening, hosting.
They fantasize about leaving their soul-sucking jobs, saying adieu to commutes
and cubicles, re-claiming their lives. My story is similar.
I’d been working for an engineering consulting firm for
16 years, ever since finishing my PhD at the University of Missouri. The
company produced reports. Analyses, estimates, plans, projections, studies. It
was a good company, and the good paycheck was quite necessary for a family of
seven. By 1998 my work had migrated from technical to managerial. I had three
job titles, teams of people complaining reporting to me, authority, and
responsibility.
But I was a roundish peg in a squarish hole. I had layers
of security clearances but couldn’t remember my safe combination or who was
allowed to know what. Oops, was that a
secret? I avoided ruthless, abrasive people—not a good idea when you’re
supposed to work with them. I dreaded management training programs, outsourced (because
my management didn’t want to be bothered) time-wasters.
I was increasingly restless, feeling that I wanted to do
something else while I was still relatively young. Something very different,
more real and tangible, with unscheduled days, time to write creatively, time
for myself. The kind of gauzy fantasies you get on day four of a week-long
meeting. When my youngest daughter graduated from college, I decided to make a
change. I quit my job, and we moved to Chatham County in North Carolina where
my oldest daughter lived.
I de-compressed. Took a tile-making class, a writing
class, started a garden, sewed, played with my baby grandson. A year later, I
was ready for a project.
The idea of a bed & breakfast popped up on my radar. We
took a weekend seminar and I, ever the weenie, brought home a spreadsheet model
that I tinkered with to understand the financials. I started looking for a charming
old house in need of cosmetic touch-ups and maybe a couple of bathrooms. What I
found were falling-down farmhouses so far out in the country my guests would
never find us, especially at night after driving an hour from the airport. (Hey,
I still get lost around here.) Then the
Poole house came on the market. A block from the main street, town water and
sewer. Perfect location, a good size. I bought it.
The Poole house became Rosemary House B&B after a
nine-month renovation. We hired a contractor to install lots of plumbing with
an overall bathroom total of six full and two half. He put in central heat
& air and all new electrical and plumbing. My friends and I covered every
wall with 100 gallons of paint. I furnished it partly new (mattresses), partly
old (everything else). I sewed window treatments, built a website, ordered
sheets & towels. The double-hung windows were a mess: cracked glass,
painted shut, broken cords. My husband removed and fixed every one. Whew! Just
writing this makes me tired.
We opened in November of 2000, over 12 years ago. Since
then, Rosemary House has provided B&B to thousands of visitors to
Pittsboro. Many guests have become good friends who return often. (One or two,
not so much, as I wrote about here.)
At the same time, some of my energies went towards
writing. I took continuing ed writing classes, joined a writing group, enrolled
in the Stonecoast MFA
program at the University of Southern Maine. (Low residency, in a gorgeous
stone mansion on Casco Bay, two years of intense writing.) I’ve had a few
stories published, helped start a writing program at the local community
college, and recently started a Sisters in Crime chapter in Raleigh. Many many
words later, my first mystery novel, Cold
Feet, was published by Five Star Cengage on January 16. It’s all good!
Is Cold Feet a
B&B mystery? Several scenes, including the murder, take place in a B&B.
There’s innkeeper rivalry and sabotage. It’s what I know, after all! (Um, not the
murder or sabotage part.)
How about you? What are your cubicle dreams?
You can learn more about Karen at her website http://www.karenpullen.com/

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