Below is the complete list of Colin Dexter books in order. For each series, the chronological reading order is the same as the order of publication.
Publication Order of Inspector Morse Books
Publication Order of Inspector Morse Collections Books
Publication Order of Short Stories/Novellas Books
Publication Order of Non-Fiction Books
Publication Order of Mysterious Profiles Books
About Colin Dexter
Colin Dexter was an English crime writer whose reputation rests on one of the most distinctive detective creations in British fiction: the intellectually formidable, irritable, beer-loving Inspector Morse. Born Norman Colin Dexter in Stamford, Lincolnshire, in 1930, he came to novel writing through classics, teaching, examinations, crosswords, and a deep attachment to language rather than through police or journalistic work. That background left a clear mark on his fiction, which combines carefully engineered mysteries with literary allusion, verbal play, misdirection, and a persistent interest in the unreliable ways people interpret evidence.
Dexter studied Classics at Christ’s College, Cambridge, after completing National Service in the Royal Signals. He then became a classics teacher, working at several schools and eventually serving as head of classics at Corby Grammar School. His teaching career was disrupted by progressive hearing loss, a problem that led him to seek work in which impaired hearing would be less restrictive. In 1966 he moved to Oxford and joined the Oxford University examinations world, remaining there professionally until the success of his fiction transformed his career.
Oxford became inseparable from the books that followed. Dexter’s first Inspector Morse novel, Last Bus to Woodstock, appeared in 1975, introducing a detective whose methods depend less on routine procedure than on intuition, obsessive reconsideration, sudden connections, and a willingness to revise his own theories. Morse’s flaws are as important as his intelligence: he can be vain, impatient, melancholy, romantically susceptible, and difficult with colleagues. Sergeant Lewis provides a steadier counterweight, and their unequal but increasingly meaningful partnership became the emotional center of the novels.
Dexter wrote thirteen Morse novels over twenty-four years, concluding the sequence with The Remorseful Day in 1999. Among the most celebrated are Service of All the Dead, The Dead of Jericho, The Wench Is Dead, and The Way Through the Woods. The books frequently turn on incomplete testimony, mistaken assumptions, hidden identities, chronology, and the reinterpretation of apparently settled facts. Dexter enjoyed the formal machinery of the whodunit, but his mysteries are rarely mechanical. Desire, loneliness, vanity, class, sexual secrecy, professional rivalry, and self-deception repeatedly complicate the puzzle.
His fascination with crosswords was not incidental to that method. Dexter was a serious crossword enthusiast, and the pleasure of clues, alternative meanings, and concealed patterns runs through his fiction. Morse himself shares intellectual traits associated with his creator, including a love of difficult puzzles, classical culture, and language. Yet Dexter resisted making him an idealized alter ego. Morse’s brilliance is continually undercut by personal weakness, bad guesses, emotional blindness, and the need for Lewis to test or stabilize his thinking.
The novels brought Dexter major recognition from the Crime Writers’ Association. He won both Silver and Gold Daggers and later received the Diamond Dagger for sustained achievement in crime writing. He was appointed OBE in 2000 for services to literature.
The screen life of Morse expanded Dexter’s influence far beyond the thirteen novels. Inspector Morse, starring John Thaw and Kevin Whately, began in 1987 and became a defining British television crime drama. Dexter appeared in numerous small cameos, while the fictional world later generated Lewis and the prequel Endeavour. Those adaptations enlarged characters and histories beyond the original books, but the foundation remained Dexter’s conception of Oxford as a place where scholarship, status, beauty, resentment, and murder could exist within the same narrow streets. He died in Oxford in 2017, leaving a compact bibliography whose cultural reach became much larger than its size suggests.


















