The Megstone Plot by Andrew Garve is somewhere between a crime caper and a crime thriller. Garve's writing style is quite unlike the fiction styles we're used to today. His prose is smooth and quick and understated, making his books a pleasure to read and easy to devour in one sitting. Plot is paramount, and Garve is known to be a master of plot, but setting and character are strong as well.
In The Megstone Plot, the story of 'a fraud to catch a fortune' as the cover of the original Pan edition had it, Garve tells the story of Clive Easton and his entanglement with his friend's wife, Isobel. Clive describes his first sight of Isobel:
"She was tall and rather statuesque, with a mass of dark brown hair that waved back from a round forehead. She had high cheekbones and sleepy-looking eyes and a full, sensual mouth. Her movements were slow and she spoke with an attractively insolent drawl. She had the poise and grace of a leopardess and I thought she was superb."
Isobel is the driving force in this thriller, demanding a fortune of Clive in return for a passionate affair. Together they devise a plot to strand Clive on Megstone island and induce the press to brand him a traitor so that he can return and sue them for libel, netting them a fortune.
Garve adeptly takes the reader along with him through the lovers' calculations, Clive's actions and the press reactions, with the plot twisting in small but unexpected ways. The pace is quick and satisfying.
There is another dimension to the story, which I won't reveal, that involves a second woman. As the original blurb had it, "Being ‘marooned’ on this small deserted island with his ‘rescue’ assured is not so bad . . . but he didn’t count on another girl getting enmeshed in the plot, and Clive soon finds that two women is too many."