Never Submit : The Kurtherian Gambit 15 (Kurtherian Gambit) cover

Never Submit : The Kurtherian Gambit 15 (Kurtherian Gambit)

The Kurtherian Gambit • Book 15

by Michael Anderle, Colleen Delany, Amanda Forstrom, Danny Gavigan, Emily Beresford, Nora Achrati, Scott McCormick, Terence Aselford, Wyn Delano, Anthony Palmini, Tyler Hyrchuk, Nicole Perez

4.52 Goodreads
(3.9K ratings)

Why You'll Love This

Book 15 and Bethany Anne still hits harder than ever — this is the series finale energy fans have been building toward.

  • Great if you want: a payoff-heavy entry in a long-running space opera
  • The experience: fast, punchy, and deeply satisfying for invested series readers
  • The writing: Anderle writes with irreverent momentum — banter, action, zero meandering
  • Skip if: you haven't read the earlier books — context is everything here

About This Book

The fifteenth entry in Michael Anderle's Kurtherian Gambit series delivers what longtime followers have been building toward: a confrontation that reshapes the balance of power across an entire region of the galaxy. Bethany Anne is done playing defense. With enemies on Earth making desperate last moves and the King of Yoll harboring secrets that are about to be used against him, the stakes have never felt more personal or more cosmic. This is a story about what happens when someone who has been pushed to every limit finally stops holding back.

What makes this installment particularly satisfying is Anderle's ability to balance galaxy-scale politics with the kind of tight, character-driven moments that make readers genuinely care who survives. The pacing never drags — subplots involving five unexpected young additions to the team land with surprising emotional weight alongside the larger military and diplomatic maneuvering. By book fifteen, the world-building is dense enough to reward loyal readers with layered payoffs, yet the writing remains punchy and propulsive enough that the pages turn fast. The tone walks a confident line between irreverent and genuinely tense, which is harder to pull off than it looks.