No Hope is the final book in the Spirit Creek Series.Former housemaid, Hope Collins, returns to Spirit Creek as the newly hired schoolteacher, but within hours her life is thrown into chaos when she opens her door to a stranger in the middle of the night.Wealthy rancher and recent widower, Raymond Rogers is desperate for a solution to his running a remote ranch, meeting all of his employees’ expectations, and raising his three sons alone. After a chance meeting with Hope Collins, sleep deprived and over-stressed with grief, he believes she is the solution to his problem. He needs her and nothing else matters.Did Raymond cross a line that there is no stepping back over? Will Hope find a solution to her situation? Should she just accept the fact that Fate has dealt her a blow she may never recover from? Or could their encounter be the best thing that ever happened to both of them?
Brenda Sinclair is a writer of historical American West and contemporary romance, a member of her local chapter of Romance Writers of America, a healthy lifestyle advocate and past leader of her TOPS weight-loss group, a gardening enthusiast and dog lover.
Brenda was raised on a farm in southern Manitoba and taught school on a semi-remote reservation in northern Manitoba where, during frequent visits to a nearby town, she met her husband, a Treaty Cree member of the local First Nations band. She worked in the accounting field for over twenty-five years. A few years ago, she retired and traded in numbers for words when she decided to be a full-time writer. Brenda and her husband have been married for over forty years, and during that time they raised two sons. She is extremely proud of her three wonderful grandchildren.
During writing breaks, Brenda enjoys walking the beautiful Fish Creek Park trails near her home in Calgary, Canada with her little dog, Kelly, checking out what Jack Abbott is up to on today’s installment of The Young and The Restless, or snuggling with Kelly on the sofa and enjoying a good book.
Brenda believes life is good, and for days that life isn’t so good, just get over it. There’s always tomorrow.