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Espionage, Mathematics, Mathematics
Code Breaking: A History and Exploration by Rudolph Kippenhahn — book cover

Code Breaking: A History and Exploration

by Rudolph Kippenhahn, Ewald Osers (Translator), Ewald Osers
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Overview

The achievements of cryptography—the art of writing and deciphering coded messages—have become a part of everyday life, especially in our age of electronic banking and the Internet. In this provocative work, Rudolf Kippenhahn offers readers both an exciting chronicle of cryptography and a lively exploration of the cryptographer's craft. Rich with vivid anecdotes from a history of coding and decoding, Code Breaking brings the often abstruse art of deciphering coded messages to the general reader and reveals the relevance of codes to our everyday high-tech society. A stylishly written, meticulously researched adventure, it will enthrall everyone who wants to know more about the ways in which communicationcan be obscured and, like magic, made clear again.

"A breezy survey of codes, ranging from the betrayal of Mary, Queen of Scots, ...to the nature of credit card security."—The New York Times

"Interesting and hugely informative reading ...[Kippenhahn] is a cryptology master." —Scientific American

"The definitive look at the subject."-Booklist

"-This fascinating history of cryptology offers many ...remarkable stories."—The Christian Science Monitor

"-Fascinating, clever, and informative ...A thoroughly satisfying book!"—Choice

A Selection of Doubleday's Library of Science Book Club
A Choice Academic Book of the Year

Synopsis

The achievements of cryptography—the art of writing and deciphering coded messages—have become a part of everyday life, especially in our age of electronic banking and the Internet. In this provocative work, Rudolf Kippenhahn offers readers both an exciting chronicle of cryptography and a lively exploration of the cryptographer's craft. Rich with vivid anecdotes from a history of coding and decoding, Code Breaking brings the often abstruse art of deciphering coded messages to the general reader and reveals the relevance of codes to our everyday high-tech society. A stylishly written, meticulously researched adventure, it will enthrall everyone who wants to know more about the ways in which communicationcan be obscured and, like magic, made clear again.

"A breezy survey of codes, ranging from the betrayal of Mary, Queen of Scots, ...to the nature of credit card security."—The New York Times

"Interesting and hugely informative reading ...[Kippenhahn] is a cryptology master." —Scientific American

"The definitive look at the subject."-Booklist

"-This fascinating history of cryptology offers many ...remarkable stories."—The Christian Science Monitor

"-Fascinating, clever, and informative ...A thoroughly satisfying book!"—Choice

A Selection of Doubleday's Library of Science Book Club
A Choice Academic Book of the Year

Library Journal

Astrophysicist Kippenhahn (One Hundred Billion Stars, Princeton Univ., 1993) attempts to introduce the general reader to the history of cryptology, with much of his book covering the events and intrigue surrounding World War II and the German cipher machine known as Enigma. Sadly, Kippenhahns use of narrative prose with stodgy technical jargon leaves the reader with neither a good story nor hard science. The documentation used in the text is sparse at best, and the annotated bibliography contains a mere handful of titles; no glossary of terms is included. Though a generous selection of illustrations is sprinkled throughout, this in no way offsets the inherent weaknesses of the volume. Not recommended.Dayne Sherman, Southeastern Louisiana Univ., Hammond

Reviews

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Editorials

Library Journal

Astrophysicist Kippenhahn (One Hundred Billion Stars, Princeton Univ., 1993) attempts to introduce the general reader to the history of cryptology, with much of his book covering the events and intrigue surrounding World War II and the German cipher machine known as Enigma. Sadly, Kippenhahns use of narrative prose with stodgy technical jargon leaves the reader with neither a good story nor hard science. The documentation used in the text is sparse at best, and the annotated bibliography contains a mere handful of titles; no glossary of terms is included. Though a generous selection of illustrations is sprinkled throughout, this in no way offsets the inherent weaknesses of the volume. Not recommended.Dayne Sherman, Southeastern Louisiana Univ., Hammond

Booknews

Astrophysicist Kippenhahn first sets out the concepts and vocabulary of cryptography, then explains various types and other aspects using examples from history. These include the work of Polybius in the first century BC, Caesar, popes, Shakespeare, Jefferson, Poe, the Enigma machine and Zimmerman telegram of World War II, the Internet, and electronic commerce. No publication data is provided for the original, sselte Botschaften/>. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Frederick Pratter

This fascinating history of cryptology offers many equally remarkable stories, even for those whose deciphering skills are limited to Captain Marvel decoder rings....As the long history of cryptology amply demonstrates...anything that can be hidden can be found.
Christian Science Monitor

Kirkus Reviews

A brief history of cryptography—encoding and decoding messages—from ancient times to the present, including technical details of various systems used in the transmission of secret information. Kippenhahn (100 Billion Suns: The Birth, Life, and Death of the Stars, 1983), a former professor of astronomy and astrophysics at the University of Göttingen and a former director of the Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics, in Munich, leads the reader into the arcane world of intricate number puzzles, secret keys, codebooks, and other devices often used by the military, undercover agents, and organizations such as the Ku Klux Klan to avoid detection by enemies and the public. Citing anecdotes in history, the author tells of the Greek historian Polybius, who devised cipher codes; of Herodotus sending secret messages warning of a Persian invasion at Thermopylae; of Scotland being betrayed when encoded messages from its supporters against Queen Elizabeth were found; of Jefferson's key wheel, used by the US Army until 1920; and of the discovery of the famous Zimmermann telegram from Germany, which helped propel the US into WWI. Kippenhahn writes at length about the ingenious German code "Enigma"—it was changed daily, growing more complicated over time. After many years of effort in the 1930s and later, the code was finally broken by three Polish mathematicians and Englishman Alan Turing. The Allies in WWII were then able to intercept military orders and plans the Nazis thought were beyond penetration. Today computers can process huge amounts of encoded data and do elaborate mathematical manipulations in a relatively short time. Will interest math mavens and computer junkies,but despite the fascinating anecdotes, the large mass of technical info may discourage reders who are less agile at manipulating numbers.

Book Details

Published
March 1, 1999
Publisher
Overlook Press, The
Pages
326
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780879519193

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