The Dead of Jericho, published in 1981, is a work of English detective fiction by Colin Dexter. It is the fifth novel in the Inspector Morse series. In 1987 it was adapted as the first episode of the highly successful television series inspired by the novels, also called Inspector Morse.
Detective Chief Inspector E. Morse of the Thames Valley Police meets Anne Scott at a party hosted by Mrs Murdoch in North Oxford. Six months later Anne Scott is found hanging in her kitchen at 9 Canal Reach, Jericho, Oxford. The police launch a suicide inquiry.
Initially Chief Inspector Bell, from the closer Oxford Central station on St. Aldate’s Street, is assigned to the case; but a fortnight later Morse takes over the investigation and questions the assumption of suicide initially.
Subsequently both of Mrs Murdoch’s sons, Edward “Ted” Murdoch and Michael Murdoch, as well as Anne Scott’s former employers, brothers Charles Richards and Conrad Richards, and Charles’s wife, Celia, come to the attention of Morse, as do Ms Scott’s neighbours, including the nosy handyman George Jackson.
Dexter gives a big clue to what might have been going on in Anne Scott’s mind with one chapter headed with this epigram from Sophocles’s Oedipus Rex: “We saw a knotted pendulum, a noose: and a strangled woman swinging there”.