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8+ oeuvres 1,926 utilisateurs 70 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Liza Mundy is the bestselling author of Michelle: A Biography and Everything Conceivable. A longtime award-winning reporter for The Washington Post, she is currently a fellow at the New America Foundation. She lives in Arlington, Virginia.
Crédit image: Claudio Vazquez

Œuvres de Liza Mundy

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The Best American Science Writing 2003 (2003) — Contributeur — 165 exemplaires

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This is the story of the thousands of women who were recruited to go to Washington, DC to be code-breakers during the war.

The author gives a rather thorough history of how each woman was recruited and what they left behind to go there. A big part of the book focuses on each woman’s recruitment and their lives during the war, but there are two women who are discussed the most. All of the women were breaking codes that saved thousands of lives but on the flip side they also learned of brothers, husbands or friends dying and they couldn’t do anything to save them. They were the ones that broke the code that allowed the US to intercept and take down Japanese Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto. They couldn’t talk about what they were doing during that time and even for several years afterward they still could not discuss what they did.

I got a bit lost when the author was describing the additives and patterns they used to break codes but otherwise the book was very well-written and quite informative.
… (plus d'informations)
 
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Cathie_Dyer | 51 autres critiques | Feb 29, 2024 |
Great history of the women recruited by the U.S. Army and Navy to work as code breakers during World War II. They were recruited from top women's colleges, teacher colleges, and elsewhere because the men were being sent overseas. They were capable and broke many of the codes used by the U.S. to defeat their opponents in Europe and the Pacific. At the end of the war, they were told they could never speak about what they had done, so they didn't. Their stories might have been lost when they went back to being housewives and mothers, but for this book.… (plus d'informations)
 
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Pferdina | 51 autres critiques | Feb 25, 2024 |
The subtitle says it all. Well written history that should have been well known long before Liza Mundy sat down to write about it.
 
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ben_r47 | 51 autres critiques | Feb 22, 2024 |
This non-fiction history work explores the previously untold story of the first women to officially serve the United States as part of the country’s World War II intelligence code breaking efforts and who comprised more than 50% of the 20,000 code breaking workers during the war. Personalized stories bring to live these civilian and military women’s experiences as they decrypted enemy messages throughout the war. Ms. Mundy uses these richly detailed accounts to weave through the overall story of the history of code-breaking efforts as well as the challenges faced by the Alllies during this period, what social conditions were like, workplace and living conditions, and the personal , sometimes tragic stories of their brothers, sweethearts, and husbands. The research in records, declassified personnel reviews, unit rosters, declassified memos, and other official documents is enhanced by the oral histories taken by Ms. Mundy of some of the surviving women, who swore an oath to keep their work secret, and which most of them did until the government allowed them to speak 50 years after the events. We also get a good glimpse of pioneer “Code Girl” Agnes Driscoll, a young mathematics teacher recruited initially to be a stenographer in the 1920s and who began to methodically decode messages from the Japanese fleet in the two decades leading up to Japan’s entry into World War II and who continued to fight for pay parity for the women workers being paid less than their male counterparts doing the same work. In addition, Ms. Mundy links the work of some of these women to key turning points in several battles, where the intelligence helped the US win decisive victories. At times the book’s narrative is choppy and a little hard to follow, but for the most part, the book reads like a novel and amply illuminates the substantial contributions women made in intelligence gathering that helped turned the tide of the war and ultimate led to victory.… (plus d'informations)
 
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bschweiger | 51 autres critiques | Feb 4, 2024 |

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ISBN
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