Okay, I finished six books (and a short story) in Wearing the Cape. The last book was a lot more experimental - it was crossovers and team-ups, and included (with permission) dimension traveling to team up with supers written by others. UIt was more short stories/novellas with a framing story, and played with the writing style.
I first want to call out that I'm glad he did it. He took a chance, including a Shakespearean-style play with Midsummer's Night Dream that I quite enjoyed. Changing up your writing style, point of view, and whole setting for a sixth book in a series takes guts.
On the other hand, I was less thrilled with it because I was unfamiliar with every single one of the team-ups (except Shakespeare), so I missed all the "woo!" points of them. I think it was several modern books plus one web comic.
I don't know if book 7 is out, but I finally got back to what I had been reading when I started that as a "portable" book, which was The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms, first of four stories in The Inheritance Trilogy by N.K. Jemisin. I finished that. It was enjoyable, I give it good grades for world building and also making a plot involving the fate of gods work well on a human level. Call it 8/10. It didn't blow me away the same way her The Fifth Season did, but it was far from "same old same old".
I've now started the next book in the series, not too far into it though I've hit some laugh-out-loud moments I needed to read to my wife, such as how the PoV character learned to read. Like her other works, she paints realistic people with flaws that you can empathize with.