Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
X, Y & Z
X, Y & Z: The Real Story of How Enigma Was Broken | Dermot Turing, Arkady Rzegocki
17 posts | 2 read | 8 to read
December, 1932In the bathroom of a Belgian hotel, a French spymaster photographs secret documents operating instructions of the cipher machine, Enigma. A few weeks later a mathematician in Warsaw begins to decipher the coded communications of the Third Reich and lay the foundations for the code-breaking operation at Bletchley Park. The co-operation between France, Britain and Poland is given the cover name X, Y & Z.December, 1942It is the middle of World War II. The Polish code-breakers are in France on the run from the Gestapo. People who know the Enigma secret are not supposed to be in the combat zone for fear of capture so MI6 devises a plan to exfiltrate them. If it goes wrong, if they are caught, they could give away the greatest secret of the war.X, Y & Z describes how French, British and Polish secret services came together to unravel the Enigma machine. It tells of how, under the very noses of the Germans, Enigma code-breaking continued in Vichy France. And how code-breakers from Poland continued their work for Her Majestys Secret Service, watching the USSRs first steps of the Cold War.The people of X, Y and Z were eccentric, colourful and caught up in world events that they could watch not control. This is their story...
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
blurb
Texreader
post image

Having filled the difficult XYZ spot with a book called X Y and Z, I have a new bingo!

#scarathlonatoz #scarathlon @Catsandbooks

Catsandbooks Hooray! 🎉 👏🏼🧡 6mo
44 likes1 comment
review
Texreader
post image
Pickpick

A thriller unlike any other I‘ve ever read—because it all was true, with the world at stake. The French created an alliance before WWII, between X (Paris), Y (London, and Z (Warsaw) to share knowledge to break and continue breaking the Enigma cipher each time the Nazis improved it. Breathtaking were the risks taken by the Pole code breakers, the French super-spy, and the German super-spy stealing his country‘s secrets. Truly nerves of steel. ⬇️

Texreader It‘s hard to have complaints about such an amazing book—and they are wholly my own problems. The spies had many names, so it was very hard to keep track of who was who. And the author, Alan Turing‘s nephew, is clearly brilliant explaining in detail how each iteration of the Enigma machines worked and how each time the code-breakers broke them, sometimes with cardboard mock-ups of the machines. I couldn‘t follow the technical details to save my ⬇️ 6mo
Texreader life. But I just took it all in stride because the real-life story going on was so awe-inspiring. Strongly recommended. #litsyatoz #scarathlonatoz #LetterX #scarathlon @Catsandbooks (edited) 6mo
AlaMich This is very up my alley at the moment. I just finished a book about deciphering the Rosetta Stone. Then I went straight to the library and borrowed one about deciphering Linear B. Enigma is basically the same thing. 6mo
See All 10 Comments
Texreader @AlaMich What was the Rosetta Stone book? I‘d love to read that! 6mo
AlaMich The Writing of the Gods: The Race to Decode the Rosetta Stone https://a.co/d/jjfSrU1 6mo
Texreader @AlaMich Awesome, thank you! 6mo
AlaMich @Texreader I thought it was fascinating. 6mo
ravenlee @AlaMich what‘s the book about Linear B, please? 6mo
AlaMich @ravenlee I‘m only a few pages into it, but it seems interesting. The Man Who Deciphered Linear B: The Story of Michael Ventris https://a.co/d/5D46X0z 6mo
ravenlee @AlaMich thank you! 6mo
44 likes2 stack adds10 comments
quote
Texreader
post image
Catsandbooks Yikes! 6mo
30 likes1 comment
quote
Texreader
post image

It‘s heartbreaking to know what happened in Poland after the Nazis were defeated. Poland code-breakers were instrumental in breaking the Enigma code, in winning the war, having been in the initial alliance against the Nazis, and then to be occupied by the Soviets. This is just a tiny bit of the horrors suffered by the Poles once the Soviets “saved” them from the Nazis. 😢

#litsyatoz #scarathlonatoz #LetterX #scarathlon @Catsandbooks

Catsandbooks Awful! 6mo
29 likes1 comment
quote
Texreader
post image

I am learning so much from this nonfiction spycraft book we don‘t generally learn about in history class. Again, dumbfounded! The Nazis wanted to poison Alexandria en masse!

#litsyatoz #scarathlonatoz #LetterX #scarathlon @Catsandbooks

Catsandbooks 😮🤬 6mo
37 likes1 stack add1 comment
quote
Texreader
post image

As sayeth the queen (any Star Wars fans know who said this?):

“So this is how liberty dies. To thunderous applause.”

#litsyatoz #scarathlonatoz #LetterX #scarathlon @Catsandbooks

Catsandbooks 👍🏼👍🏼 6mo
25 likes1 comment
quote
Texreader
post image

Who knew that the British set out to destroy the French Navy during WWII? I didn‘t!

This was in the Port of Oran, Algeria

#litsyatoz #scarathlonatoz #LetterX #scarathlon @Catsandbooks

Catsandbooks 😮 6mo
26 likes1 comment
quote
Texreader
post image

We are finally introduced to Alan Turing. His nephew wrote this book. Turing was clearly a genius, and his nephew appears to be pretty danged smart himself as he explains the inner workings of the Enigma machine. But the author is trying to give credit where credit‘s due—and so much of the groundbreaking work was done by some Polish geniuses.

#litsyatoz #scarathlonatoz #LetterX #scarathlon @Catsandbooks

Catsandbooks 👏🏼👏🏼🧡 6mo
38 likes1 comment
quote
Texreader
post image

The Nazis created their own excuse to invade Poland

#litsyatoz #scarathlonatoz #LetterX #scarathlon @Catsandbooks

CSeydel Classic false flag op 6mo
Catsandbooks 🤬🤬 6mo
34 likes2 comments
quote
Texreader
post image

The Brits and French were dumbfounded to learn the Poles had for years broken the Enigma code. The problem: the Poles lacked the money to build enough of their code-breaking machines to keep up with the Germans. Thus, the Poles decided to reveal their long-held secrets to the X-Y-Z alliance once the Nazis threatened Poland. X=France, Y=London, Z=Warsaw.

#litsyatoz #scarathlonatoz #LetterX #scarathlon @Catsandbooks

Catsandbooks Wow! 👏🏼 6mo
34 likes1 comment
blurb
Texreader
post image

“Who…could tell what Hitler‘s new political programme would bring?…The policies…by the Nazi Party had, so far, been all domestically focused: suspending constitutional protections; removing Jews from public offices and schools; introducing a eugenics programme for people with disabilities; establishing concentration camps; and burning un-German books. ⬇️

Texreader However unpleasant all that might be, it was not…a threat to other countries.
Nonetheless, Poland was worried.”

#litsyatoz #letterX #scarathlon #batbrigade @Catsandbooks
(edited) 6mo
43 likes1 comment
quote
Texreader
post image

Pre-WWII, the Poles were already trying to break the enigma code, being between two hostile nations wanting their land (the Germans and the Soviets). Apparently it was easy to buy enigma machines…but did them little good.

#litsyatoz #letterX

blurb
Texreader
post image

This is my next ebook and yes it‘s written by Alan Turing‘s nephew. Here‘s a summary from the intro:

“The Enigma endeavour was, then, an international collaboration by three countries. For the greater security of the joint enterprise, the code-breakers labelled themselves X, Y and Z for the French, English and Polish centres respectively.”

The goal is to tell the story of the code breaking that started with the Poles, then the French. Turing ⬇️

Texreader had a role, certainly, but it wouldn‘t have been possible—it seems—without the previous decade of work by the Poles. I‘m very much looking forward to reading it. And it will be the last letter of the alphabet for my #litsyatoz challenge for 2023 and it‘ll work for #scarathlonatoz as well! #letterX @Catsandbooks #batbrigade (edited) 6mo
Catsandbooks Woohoo! 🙌🏼🧡 6mo
50 likes3 stack adds2 comments
review
rwmg
X, Y & Z: The Real Story of How Enigma Was Broken | Dermot Turing, Arkady Rzegocki
post image
Pickpick

Alan Turing's nephew's history of the decipherment of the Enigma coding machine focuses more on the work by a team of Poles breaking earlier versions of the Enigma codes. It does assume rather more familiarity with how the physical machines actually work than I possess, which made it hard to follow in places, but it was nevertheless fascinating.

19 likes1 stack add
quote
rwmg
X, Y & Z: The Real Story of How Enigma Was Broken | Dermot Turing, Arkady Rzegocki
post image

November 1918 was a good month for Maksymilian Ciężki.

#FirstLineFridays
@ShyBookOwl

blurb
rwmg
X, Y & Z: The Real Story of How Enigma Was Broken | Dermot Turing, Arkady Rzegocki
post image
blurb
rwmg
X, Y & Z: The Real Story of How Enigma Was Broken | Dermot Turing, Arkady Rzegocki
post image

I thought I was going to have to skip #LetterX in the #alphabetgame but then I saw this book in my BookBub email this morning. Fortunately it was on Scribd, so I've started it, so I'm going to count it.

@Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks