When President Bill Clinton announced that Walter Mosley was one of his favorite writers, Black Betty (1994), Mosley's third detective novel featuring African American P.I. Easy Rawlins, soared up the bestseller lists. It's little wonder Clinton is a fan: Mosley's writing, an edgy, atmospheric blend of literary and pulp fiction, is like nobody else's. Some of his books are detective fiction, some are sci-fi, and all defy easy categorization.

Mosley was born in Los Angeles, traveled east to college, and found his way into writing fiction by way of working as a computer programmer, caterer, and potter. His first Easy Rawlins book, Gone Fishin' didn't find a publisher, but the next, Devil in a Blue Dress (1990) most certainly did -- and the world was introduced to a startlingly different P.I.

Part of the success of the Easy Rawlins series is Mosley's gift for character development. Easy, who stumbles into detective work after being laid off by the aircraft industry, ages in real time in the novels, marries, and experiences believable financial troubles and successes. In addition, Mosley's ability to evoke atmosphere -- the dangers and complexities of life in the toughest neighborhoods of Los Angeles -- truly shines. His treatment of historic detail (the Rawlins books take place in Los Angeles from the 1940s to the mid-1960s) is impeccable, his dialogue fine-tuned and dead-on.

In 2002, Mosley introduced a new series featuring Fearless Jones, an Army vet with a rigid moral compass, and his friend, a used-bookstore owner named Paris Minton. The series is set in the black neighborhoods of 1950s L.A. and captures the racial climate of the times. Mosley himself summed up the first book, 2002's Fearless Jones, as "comic noir with a fringe of social realism."

Despite the success of his bestselling crime series, Mosley is a writer who resolutely resists pigeonholing. He regularly pens literary fiction, short stories, essays, and sci-fi novels, and he has made bold forays into erotica, YA fiction, and political polemic. "I didn't start off being a mystery writer," he said in an interview with NPR. "There's many things that I am." Fans of this talented, genre-bending author could not agree more!

All Books

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Title: Fortunate Son: A Novel, Author: Walter Mosley
Title: The Silent Speaker (Nero Wolfe Series), Author: Rex Stout
Title: Debbie Doesn't Do It Anymore, Author: Walter Mosley
Paperback $14.59 $15.95 Current price is $14.59, Original price is $15.95.
Title: Folding the Red Into the Black: Developing a Viable Untopia for Human Survival in the 21st Century, Author: Walter Mosley
Title: Inside a Silver Box, Author: Walter Mosley
Title: Diablerie: A Novel, Author: Walter Mosley
eBook $8.49 $8.99 Current price is $8.49, Original price is $8.99.
Title: R L'S Dream, Author: Walter Mosley
Title: Fall Of Heaven, The, Author: Walter Mosley
Title: Merge: A Novel from Crosstown to Oblivion, Author: Walter Mosley
Title: Black Genius: African American Solutions to African American Problems, Author: Regina Austin
Title: The Civil Rights Reader: American Literature from Jim Crow to Reconciliation, Author: Julie Armstrong
Title: The Best American Short Stories 2003, Author: Walter Mosley
Title: Futureland: Nine Stories of an Imminent World, Author: Walter Mosley
eBook $10.49 $11.99 Current price is $10.49, Original price is $11.99.
Title: The Best American Nonrequired Reading 2013, Author: Dave Eggers
Title: 47, Author: Walter Mosley
Title: The Tempest Tales, Author: Walter Mosley
Title: The Man Who Cried I Am: A Novel, Author: John A. Williams
eBook $10.99 $17.99 Current price is $10.99, Original price is $17.99.
Title: Blue Light, Author: Walter Mosley
eBook $9.49 $9.99 Current price is $9.49, Original price is $9.99.
Title: Apex Magazine Issue 95, Author: Walter Mosley
Title: Stepping Stone and Love Machine: Two Short Novels from Crosstown to Oblivion, Author: Walter Mosley
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