Title: Telempath Author: Spider Robinson Year: 1976 Publisher: Tor Reviewer: Ian Leroux Spider Robinson's deep faith in human nature, in the capacity of decent people to make the ugly world a better place, can be uplifting. If you want a dose of that sort of thing, read "Callahan's Mistress." Here, writing about a trained killer out to exact humanity's vengeance on the man who shattered civilisation as we know it, Robinson's concomitant inability to write a convincingly dark character (or even a believably grey one) becomes something of a handicap. He just can't help making his characters better than they at first seem. Having a character change and grow and become kinder through a story is laudable, but you need to invest a minimum page-count per character to make the growth believable and you'd need a trilogy to do the job for your entire cast. That said, an expanded version of "Telempath" would have a lot going for it. Robinson proposes an original and horrific technique to destroy civilised humanity, a peculiar solution to all our ecological problems, and some amusing observations on the connection between current courtship conventions and the deficiencies of our sensory apparatus. There's an under-exploited backstory about the politics and logistics of rebuilding humanity from the ruins, a few interesting tactical scenarios, and some amusing use of multiple unreliable narrators: pay attention to the sources cited for each chapter; they were chosen with care. There's much to like here; I'm just not sure it all fits into a single 300-page trade paperback.