
Seizing the Enigma
The Race to Break the German U-Boats Codes, 1939–1943
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Narrated by:
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Bernard Mayes
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By:
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David Kahn
About this listen
For almost four desperate years, between 1939 and 1943, British and American navies fought a savage, losing battle against German submarine wolf packs. The Allies might never have turned the tide of that historic battle without an intelligence coup. The race to break the German U-boat codes is one of the last great untold stories of World War II.
David Kahn, the world’s leading historian of cryptology, brings to life this tense, behind-the-scenes drama for the first time. Seizing the Enigma provides the definitive account of how British and American code breakers fought a war of wits against Nazi naval communications and helped lead the Allies to victory in the crucial Battle of the Atlantic.
©1991 David Khan (P)1994 Blackstone Audio, Inc.Critic reviews
wonderful first book
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Unsurprisingly complex but worth it..
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Also the narrator's mock accents in the first half of the book are a bit grating.
Overall though a good listen on the Enigma history.
Informative
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Seizing the Enigma
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How brainpower won WW2
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Enigma what a history
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At times thrilling and suspenseful. And doesn't portray the Germans as monsters.
It has faults but its upsides outweigh them.
This book comes off very well when compared with Ben Macintyre's yarny 'Agent Zigzag' (2007 & 2016), one of his typical ahistorical romanticisations of WW2 horrors; e.g. in Chapter 7 'Codebreakers' totally exaggerates the success of Bletchley Park codebreakers e.g. 'From that moment (8.1940) until the end of the war, British intelligence continuously intercepted and read the wireless traffic of the German secret service.' That statement is close to being a lie; it is a serious untruth.
Kahn's book (reviewed here) smashes that idea, and goes into the necessary detail about the inability of BP to make sense of e.g. German U-Boot's (submarines) messages which led to the loss of huge numbers of Allied ships and personnel.
That is the difference between the two books, and in my opinion demonstrates why Kahn's book is praiseworthy, while Macintyre's is schmaltz.
Authentic WW2 history that doesn't glamourise
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Great content - poor delivery
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Code.
Enlightening History of the Enigma
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Worth the time
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