Rating: *****
Tags: History, General, Military, Social Science, Lang:en
Publisher: Scribner
Added: June 2, 2019
Modified: November 5, 2021
Summary
The magnificent, unrivaled history of codes and
ciphers—how they're made, how they're broken, and the
many and fascinating roles they've played since the dawn of
civilization in war, business, diplomacy, and
espionage—updated with a new chapter on computer
cryptography and the Ultra secret.
Man has created codes to keep secrets and has broken codes
to learn those secrets since the time of the Pharaohs. For
4,000 years, fierce battles have been waged between
codemakers and codebreakers, and the story of these battles
is civilization's secret history, the hidden account of how
wars were won and lost, diplomatic intrigues foiled, business
secrets stolen, governments ruined, computers hacked. From
the XYZ Affair to the Dreyfus Affair, from the Gallic War to
the Persian Gulf, from Druidic runes and the kaballah to
outer space, from the Zimmermann telegram to Enigma to the
Manhattan Project, codebreaking has shaped the course of
human events to an extent beyond any easy reckoning. Once a
government monopoly, cryptology today touches everybody. It
secures the Internet, keeps e-mail private, maintains the
integrity of cash machine transactions, and scrambles TV
signals on unpaid-for channels. David Kahn's
The Codebreakers takes the measure of what codes and
codebreaking have meant in human history in a single
comprehensive account, astonishing in its scope and
enthralling in its execution. Hailed upon first publication
as a book likely to become the definitive work of its kind,
The Codebreakers has more than lived up to that
prediction: it remains unsurpassed. With a brilliant new
chapter that makes use of previously classified documents to
bring the book thoroughly up to date, and to explore the
myriad ways computer codes and their hackers are changing all
of our lives,
The Codebreakers is the skeleton key to a thousand
thrilling true stories of intrigue, mystery, and adventure.
It is a masterpiece of the historian's art. **