A strange and not terribly well-executed book by the man known in the 70s and 80s as "Mr. Bestseller," Lawrence Sanders, "The Tangent Factor" is nevertheless possessing of a certain charm. It is the story of a white American oil executive, Peter Tangent, and the African dictator, Obiri "The Little Captain" Anyoke, he has chosen to serve. The Captain has come to power in the fictional nation of Ansante via a coup, and has bold plans to unite all of Africa under his rule, but has issues balancing his crazy white mistress with his traditionalist black fiance. Tangent, on the other hand, is an oil man who has become a de facto part of the Captain's government, but is new to intrigue and also fumbling through a clumsy romance with an African woman. Overlaying them both is yet more intrigue involving British, French and American intelligence, all of whom want to exploit Anyoke's ambitions for their own ends.
Sanders meat and drink as a novelist was mysteries, and when writing international intrigue he was on less surefooted ground, a position weakened further by his inability to decide whether Tangent or the Captain was the real subject of the book. He also spends a great deal of time exploring the interracial romances of the characters, which was probably quite shocking when the book was written but won't raise much eyebrow now. On the other hand, Sanders was such an outstanding prose writer that, like pizza, he is good even when he is bad; and his overall concept, a story about a "black Napoleon" uniting Africa by force, guile and sheer charisma, is fascinating if somewhat dated (Pan-Africanism was a big deal in the 70s, but ethnic and religious politics in Africa being what they are, the idea of a united continent seems ridiculous right now). While I struggled with maintaining interest in the book during its middle chapters, which is unusual for a guy who was so good at making the reader turn pages, Sanders did manage to interest me enough in the saga of the Little Captain to buy the sequel, "The Tangent Objective."