Ghalen by Walter Mosley
Thursday, May 21, 2026 at 10:13AM 
Published by Amistad on May 26, 2026
Walter Mosley is on my laminated list of America's three best crime novelists. Ghalen isn’t a crime novel, but Mosley brings the same sense of time and place, deep characterization, and storytelling ability to this coming-of-age story. Mosley is not just one of America’s best crime novelists; he’s one of the country’s best writers.
The story begins when Jamilah Fenestra meets Robert Horton at a farmer’s market in Santa Monica. Jamilah is studying for a PhD and an M.D. Robert works in a vegan restaurant and aspires to own a restaurant that serves healing foods. Robert explains that his mother has been in the crazy house since shooting a boyfriend. Robert’s “mother wasn’t even sure of who his father was. It was between two guys named William and one named Talib.” Jamilah and Robert are obviously from different worlds, but Robert — who has no problem finding women who want to shag — is drawn to Jamilah because she makes him feel brave.
Jamilah and Robert fall in love and seem to have an ideal relationship, but Jamilah’s mother Pristine instantly dislikes Robert. Because he is slow and deliberate when he answers her questions, she describes him using the R-word.
The extent to which Robert is developmentally disabled is unclear. He thrives in a familiar routine but doesn’t cope well with anything new. He didn’t excel in school because “I can’t know something unless I see it. I have to see and touch things in order to learn ’em.”
Jamilah sees beyond Robert’s limitations. She loves him for his decency and for how he makes her feel. She admires his ability to see the world as it is rather than seeing what he wants to see. “She had accepted him for what he was before she even knew what he was.” It doesn’t hurt that Robert is exceptionally good in the sack.
The first quarter of the novel develops an unusual and exceptionally moving love story, but it is not a story that is free from pain. Unlike Jamilah, Pristine is never willing to accept Robert. After Jamilah becomes pregnant and marries Robert, Pristine announces that she wants Jamilah “out of my house, out of my life, out of my will, out of everything.”
Robert and Jamilah name their son Ghalen Romeo Horton. The rest of the novel follows Ghalen’s life through his late teens. Although Ghalen is an excellent student, he finds himself playing the role of primary caregiver for his father during much of his young life. When others disparage his father’s lack of intelligence, Ghalen retorts that he’s “smarter than most people when it comes to what’s right and what’s not right.” That might be the most important form of intelligence, one that too many "smart" people lack.
The family drama is altered by the arrival of Night Farr, Ghalen’s grandfather on his mother’s side. The family thought that Night died in the Vietnam War, but Night made a simple life for himself in Vietnam before returning to America. He stayed with a young Vietnamese woman because “it felt like the first time ever that somebody didn’t treat me like a empty bag of rice.” The importance of treating people with respect and of feeling respected is a theme in many of Mosley’s novels.
The story includes moments that will be familiar to Mosley’s fans, including a pivotal scene in which Robert sustains a head injury after being tackled by the police because he’s walking to work through a white neighborhood at three in the morning. Robert easily loses focus after his brain is injured, reinforcing Ghalen’s commitment to caring for his father.
Ghalen experiences the usual conflicts that kids endure as they grow up, although his teenage sex life might be healthier than most. He’s long had a thing for his childhood friend Lovely but gets in trouble with his childhood friend Bruno when Lovely becomes Bruno’s girlfriend. An encounter with Bruno leaves Ghalen with a brain injury of his own. The injury makes him prone to moments of darkness and a rage that he struggles to control.
Freedom is one of the novel’s strongest themes. Freedom from captivity imposed by others and by ourselves. “I guess it always seems like you’re locked in somewhere,” Ghalen says — a job or a schedule or a prison cell. When we’re locked into a relationship or responsibilities that we can’t shirk, we need to understand that we have the freedom to love and that choosing love represents freedom’s embrace, not its surrender.
Another theme is the duality of human nature. Head injuries might unlock the impulse to commit violent acts but only because the potential for violence is there to unlock. People blend good and evil in their lives. They might not recognize their own evil. Those who do may struggle to overcome it, but they are really working to overcome bad parenting, the hardships of poverty, trauma, or other forces that shaped their lives in ways they aren’t equipped to understand.
The subculture of the street is another theme that will be familiar to Mosley’s fans. As Robert explains, “when the street gets ahold’a you it just, it just twists you up inside till your heart is all strangled up with your gut.”
The harm caused by judging people we don’t know might be the story’s most powerful theme. Mosley usually illustrates that harm in the context of racial stereotypes, but Ghalen explores the evil of seeing others as “simple” — of using the R-word to describe them — despite their ability to enrich the world with their love.
The story takes a dark turn but has a hopeful ending. Like all lives, Ghalen’s might go in many directions, depending on the choices he makes. He needs to get a handle on his unpredictable impulses toward violence. But Ghalen has the support of caring friends and family (if you don’t count Pristine). He learns the importance of making his own choices, of pursuing an education on his own terms and in his own time, rather than “getting a degree that is there to make you seem like everybody else. It’s a fancy way of learning how to do what people tell you to do.” The path Ghalen will eventually choose is unclear (the novel ends before he reaches adulthood), but Mosley makes clear that children can be empowered to overcome hardship when they are raised with love.
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