Brunner has always been one of those British authors who has been a bit Marmite for me.
There have been highbrow and detailed dystopian futures (Stand on Zanzibar, The Sheep Look Up), predictive futures (the internet, computer viruses in 'The Shockwave Rider') and considerable other work of space opera and poorly received works like 'Children of the Tunder'.
'The Telepathist' came before the magnum opus of 'Zanzibar' and 'Sheep' and feels like an author trying to make his way with something new.
The protagonist (Gerry) is deeply physically flawed from the outset. Disadvantaged by this disability and his background in the unspecified crisis of a decayed Britain, he muddles his way through the world before a new crisis in early adulthood awakens his latent telepathic abilities.
Always destined to be an outsider, he nonetheless carves a worthy niche in his new world, before returning to his home town and a re-connection with those who made him.
Brunner's portrayal of Gerry is, I think of its' time - almost pitying, but there's no real malice in it and there's no real feeling that Brunner is properly inside Gerry's head. This is a shame as Gerry's meant to know what's inside other people's heads, so it would be good to know!
One of the interesting things about reading this from more than 50 years in the future, is that Brunner has managed to keep technology almost completely absent from his depictions of ordinary life. With the exception of a few phone calls, nothing technological really intrudes into the workings of the characters - this in itself is quite an achievement.
I would like to have enjoyed this a bit more, but the characters don't have depth and it all ends just too pat for me. Nonetheless, it doesn't feel tropey, probably because there weren't that many Psi characters around at that time, and it's good to see Brunner exploring these ideas, feeling his way without 50 years of convention to shape it - in fact, he was shaping some of the conventions when this was written and, if nothing else, the book is worth reading for that alone.