I've never met a Walter Mosley book I didn't like, and that hasn't changed. That said, the way he approaches SF/F concepts tends to be a bit different from how he writes his other books. I'm not sure why, and I'm also not sure I'm entirely on board with that direction. Maybe because his audience is largely a mystery and mainstream, he feels a need to simplify some of the things that might otherwise turn off his primary readership? Whatever the reason, the writing takes on a childlike quality - not immature, but simple, stripped down, direct. The story itself remains dense with nuanced meaning, which makes for an interesting juxtaposition. So I guess I'm also not sure that I'm NOT entirely on board...