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The Dead Of Jericho (inspector Morse 5) Apr 2026

: Dexter elevates the procedural with an epigram from Sophocles’s Oedipus Rex , framing the "knotted pendulum" of the noose as part of a larger, tragic inevitability. Book vs. Screen: A Different Shade of Morse

For fans of the TV series , reading the original novel can be a jarring, yet rewarding, experience. The Dead of Jericho (Inspector Morse 5)

: Wealthy owners of a small publishing firm with murky ties to Anne. : Dexter elevates the procedural with an epigram

While the police initially declare it a suicide, Morse is haunted by what he saw—and what he didn't do—when he visited her house just hours before the body was discovered. What follows is a labyrinthine investigation involving: : Wealthy owners of a small publishing firm

: Whose sons Anne had tutored, revealing a web of blackmail and hidden identities.

Whether you first met him in the pages of a Colin Dexter novel or through the iconic performance of John Thaw, stands as a pivotal moment in the Morse mythos. Though it is the fifth book in the literary series (published in 1981), it was chosen as the debut episode for the ITV television series in 1987, effectively introducing the world to the "dreaming spires" of Oxford and its most brilliant, yet prickly, detective. The Story: A Tragedy of Proximity

The narrative begins with a rare, missed opportunity for Morse: a flirtation with Anne Scott (renamed Stavely in the TV series) at a North Oxford party. Months later, Anne is found hanging in her kitchen at 9 Canal Reach, in the bohemian district of Jericho .

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