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Inspector Morse

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Inspector Endeavour Morse is a fictional character, who features in a series of thirteen detective novels by British author Colin Dexter. His first name was kept a secret until the end of Death is Now My Neighbour. The orgin of his name is the vessel HM Bark Endeavour, Morse's father was supposed to be a fan of Captain James Cook.

The titles are:

  • Last Bus to Woodstock, 1975
  • Last Seen Wearing, 1976
  • Silent World of Nicholas Quinn, 1977
  • Service of All the Dead, 1979
  • The Dead of Jerico, 1981
  • The Riddle of the Third Mile, 1983
  • The Secret of Annexe 3, 1986
  • The Wench is Dead, 1989
  • The Jewel That Was Ours, 1991
  • The Way Through the Woods, 1992
  • The Daughters of Cain, 1994
  • Death is Now My Neighbour, 1996
  • The Remorseful Day: The Final Inspector Morse Novel, 2000

Dexter killed Morse in his last book, and has thus far shown no sign of resurrecting him - unlike Arthur Conan Doyle, who killed his main character only to have to bring him back to life.

The Inspector Morse novels have been made into a very successful TV series (also called Inspector Morse) for the British TV channel ITV. The series was made by Zenith Productions for Central (a company later acquired by Carlton.) The series comprises 33 two-hour episodes (100 minutes excluding commercials) - twenty more episodes than there are novels - produced between 1987 and 2001. The final episode was of course adapted from the final novel. The Inspector himself is played by John Thaw and the faithful Sergeant Lewis by Kevin Whately. Dexter makes a cameo appearance in each of the episodes. The series remains popular and is frequently repeated on ITV1 and ITV2. More recently it has begun to be issued as a periodic series of cut-price videos and DVDs containing one episode each, together with magazine-size booklets giving background information on each episode. See the official web site of the TV series at http://www.inspectormorse.co.uk/. Sadly, John Thaw died only months after the series ended.

It is primarily the personality of the main character that makes the Inspector Morse novels so successful. With his beautiful Jaguar car, thirst for beer, snobbery, and penchant for Wagner, he is a likeable person despite his sullen temperament.

Dexter is a fan of cryptic crosswords, and Inspector Morse is named for champion solver Sir Jeremy Morse. In every novel the surname of the killer is taken from those of winners of the weekly Azed solving competition that appears in The Observer.

Referenced By

1987 in television | 1988 in television | 1989 in television | 1990 in television | 1991 in television | 1992 in television | 1993 in television | 1994 in television | 1995 in television | 1996 in television | 1997 in television | 1998 in television | 1999 in television | 2000 in television | 2002 in memoriam | Alfred Hitchcock | Alfred J. Hitchcock | Alfred Joseph Hitchcock | Central Independent Television | Central Television | Colin Dexter | Colleges of Oxford University | Deaths in 2002 | Detective fiction | Detective story | Eagle and Child (Oxford pub) | Famous pairs | Freddie Jones | John Junkin | John Thaw | Julia Sawalha | Kevin Whately | List of famous pairs | List of male television actors | Liza Walker | Morse | Mystery fiction | Mystery novel | Oxford | Oxford, England | Oxford University | Oxford Universty | Richard Wilson | The Eagle and Child | The University of Oxford | University of Oxford

 

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Inspector Morse".

 

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