The Whip Hand is another in the Arcturus Crime Classics series. Canning is an interesting person. Along with his award winning crime fiction he also wrote children's books, one trilogy of which was adapted for US television. He also has 37 citations in the most important English dictionary, after Dr. Johnson's, namely the OED.
This book was written in 1965, in the height of Ian Fleming's James Bond series the first of which was written in 1953, and it shows the influence. Rex Carver is a private detective who also takes on jobs for British secret service. He is tenacious, smart, and like Bond promiscuous. His secretary, or should I say business partner, is Hilda Wilkins also very smart.
Carver takes the seemingly easy job for Hans Stebelson of finding a German au pair, Katarina Saxmann, who has gone missing. He knows the girl left her job and moved to Brighton and just wants to know if she is alright - or does he. Find her he does and completely comes under her spell. Katarina is a Siren. She lures men with her beauty and sexual aura. She is smart, but completely amoral and feels nothing but her own passion for money for which she will do anything including stepping over the bodies who get in her way.
Her quest for money, and Rex's determination to have her, leads them into a tangled international plot, replete with spies from all the major powers who alternately try to help Rex, or kill him, or both. Rex pretends to throw in with all of them for the money, of course only being loyal to the British spies who warn him they will only go so far to protect him because the job is more important than people - which is exactly what they do.
Of course nobody is what they seem, everybody is a killer, some more dangerous than others. Some of the characters are stock, or seem stock to us now. And the body count rises as Rex figures out the truth of what's going on. Along the way he meets Verite Latour-Mesmin the gal Friday of one of the spies also paying Rex to follow Katarina and company, and she's one of the only real humans in the book. She is tasked to make his travel arrangements, and give him the help he needs. She's the one you end up rooting for.
As mentioned earlier this is a convoluted plot, replete with spies, killers, more spies out to kill Rex, international plots, and an unexpected twist. The bodies pile up but Rex manages to make it and at the end and get the girl. I'm not telling you which one.
Now let me tell you what doesn't work, or should I say seems stale in the 21st century. The Bondlike sexuality is one of the big points. I think Canning felt he had to put it in to compete with Flemming. How could you write and get published a spy novel without the sex in the 1960s? You couldn't, but I don't really think Canning's heart was in it.
What also doesn't work is the weapons part of it. The British secret service outfits him with a gun for protection, but it's a .22, and while Rex says he would have preferred a .38 he takes the .22 without protest. A .22 is absolutely worthless as personal protection unless you are up close and personal and can get in a shot at a vital organ like the heart. With adrenaline pumping or at a distance a .22, wouldn't stop a kitten. And when the chips fall, and Rex knows he is going to have to fight for his life, he chooses a .22 rifle over a .404! That is just plain stupid on the face of it. It's like taking a knife to a gunfight.
You might think I didn't like this book, but that would be incorrect. I did like it. The action moves along at a good pace. You like Rex, as a character. The story has enough complexity to keep your attention. All good things. And if that isn't enough, the paragraph in chapter seven about national character, and the media is spot on. He even speculates, rather prophetically, that China will be the dominant nation and in the future will end up ruling the world. Chilling, sixty years later.
One last little bit here. In the course of the events near the end of the book we meet a British contact named Severus, who has long, lanky, black hair. He seems to the world a bad guy, but gives his life to help Rex survive. Sound familiar Harry Potter fans? It did to me as well.