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The Man from the Turkish Slave (1953)

Novel (192 pages, 66,828 words)


First edition
US first
First American edition
Paperback 1961
1961 paperback
Uniform edition
Uniform edition
Super Detective Library 1957
Comic strip version

 

The Book

The hero is Peter Landers, an officer in the merchant navy with a drink problem following divorce. After a prison sentence he is offered a 'last chance' opportunity to carry out an undercover assignment; if successful he may be reinstated with his previous employer. He is to sign on with a scruffy cargo boat, the Turkish Slave, suspected of smuggling operations, and try to collect evidence of who is involved and where the loot is delivered.

However, the crew of the Turkish Slave grow suspicious and, just as they are making a rendezvous off an island on the coast of Brazil, Peter is thrown overboard. He survives the long swim to shore, but will now have to contend with threats posed by the human villains and by the island's geology.

Publishing history

This was Canning's seventh post-war book for Hodder and Stoughton, published in 1954 at 10/6 with a print run of 14,000 copies and with a simultaneous cheap book club edition at 6/-. It first appeared as a supplement to the Toronto Star Weekly on 14th November 1953 under the title "Trial by Water", and was also serialised in John Bull, December 1953/January 1954, with some vivid illustrations by S. Fancett. The US edition by W. Sloane Associates came out in 1954. There was a 1961 paperback at 2/6 with a print run of 25,000. It was included in the Heinemann Uniform Edition of 1970; a later report to Hodder and Stoughton showed only 521 copies sold in that form. In 1957 a comic strip version under the title "The Jewel Smugglers" was issued in Super Detective Library No 95.

The lengthy and very vivid account of the swim to shore, occupying pages 14 to 22 of the hardback edition, recalls Canning's previous use of a "trial by water" in his Alan Gould novel Atlantic Company published in 1940, which describes life in an open boat adrift in the Atlantic after the torpedoing of a cargo boat.