This is a thriller with a difference in that there is no single main protagonist; there are a number of characters each of whom take centre stage at various stages of the tale.
The character who features most often is Verne Baird and he begins the fast and furious action right at the start when he steals a $5,000 emerald and diamond bracelet from actress Jean Bruce and he takes it to the Frou-Frou Club owner and part-time fence Ralph Rico, who feels that it is too hot for him to handle. But Baird is nothing if not a bully, as well as being a well trained killer, and he brow-beats Rico into giving him $500 for it. It later turns out that Bruce and a police officer investigating are killed in the robbery so Rico is petrified at getting found out in case he is dragged into the spotlight.
Rico is especially worried when Lieutenant George Olin of the Homicide Bureau turns up in his office only 10 minutes after Baird has departed. Rico is flustered but, with the help of a couple of stiff whiskeys, he manages to keep his cool and stave off the Lieutenant. But this incident is just one of the many sub-plots that thread their way through the novel and Baird's association with Rico is to intensify as the story develops.
And develop is does, at a rapid rate, for it transpires that a jewel thief Paul Hater had stolen the Rajah of Chittabad's $500,000 jewel collection almost 20 years earlier and, despite intense police questioning, he did not give away where he had hidden the jewels. So there are a number of parties interested in finding out where they are so that they can cash in, especially as the Rajah has returned to England and is offering a substantial reward for the jewels' recovery; he has no altruistic motive, however, for he intends to defraud the insurance company if and when they are returned. The insurance company has been on the case since the jewels went missing and Harmon Purvis, the head of the International Detective Agency, with his number one operator Ed Dallas, have been leading the investigation on their behalf.
Preston Kile and brother and sister Adam and Eve Gillis, who have a volatile relationship, are all interested in getting the jewels and taking a share of the proceeds so Baird is offered $10,000 to spring Hater from the high security prison at Bellmore Farm where he is held. There are two difficulties in this plan, however. Firstly, Hater has served 18 years and has only two remaining before his release and it is thought that he will not want to jeopardise his release date by escaping. Secondly, the prison is surrounded by swamps which will not make it easy to get away once Hater has been kidnapped.
But Baird takes up the challenge and with a timid and frightened Rico alongside, and with some inside help he has managed to secure by dint of a bribe, he sets out to do the business. But Dallas has some insider information from one of the starlets at the Frou-Frou Club, Zoe Norton, whose thin-walled dressing room is next to Rico's office. Zoe duly passes on all the tit-bits she gets but in the end she meets a sticky end once Baird discovers that she is passing on information.
The climax of the story is terrific as Olin and his men, and Dallas and his colleagues try to track down Baird, who does get severely injured early on in a shoot-out, but a certain Anita Jackson, who turns up with surprising information at the end, allows him to hole up in her apartment until the heat dies down. So he finally makes it to Bellmore Farm where the action is certainly fast, furious and edge of the seat stuff.
'The Fast Buck' is typical James Hadley Chase, who deserves top marks for putting so much thrill into 'thriller'!