Codes have decided the fates of empires, countries, and
monarchies throughout recorded history. Mary, Queen of Scots was put
to death by her cousin, Queen Elizabeth, for the high crime of treason
after spymaster Sir Francis Walsingham cracked the secret code she used
to communicate with her conspirators. And thus the course of British
history was altered by a few sheets of cryptic prose. This is just one
link in humankind's evolutionary chain of secret communication, and
just one of the fascinating incidents recounted in The Code Book,
written by bestselling author Simon Singh.
Combining a superb storyteller's sense of drama and
a scientist's appreciation for technical perfection, Singh traces the
evolution of secret writing from ancient Greek military espionage to
the frontiers of computer science. The result is an epic tale of human
ingenuity, with examples that range from the poignant to the peculiar
to the world-historical.
There is the case of the Beale ciphers, which involves
Wild West escapades, a cowboy who amassed a vast fortune, a buried treasure
worth $20 million, and a mysterious set of encrypted papers describing
its whereabouts--papers that have baffled generations of cryptanalysts
and captivated hundreds of treasure hunters.
A speedier end to a bloody war was the only reward that
could be promised to the Allied code breakers of World Wars I and II,
whose selfless contributions altered the course of history; but few
of them lived to receive any credit for their top-secret accomplishments.
Among the most moving of these stories is that of the World War II British
code breaker Alan Turing, who gave up a brilliant career in mathematics
to devote himself to the Allied cause, only to end his years punished
by the state for his homosexuality, while his heroism was ignored. No
less heroic were the Navajo code talkers, who volunteered without hesitation
to risk their lives for the Allied forces in the Japanese theater, where
they were routinely mistaken for the enemy.
Interspersed with these gripping stories are clear mathematical,
linguistic, and technological demonstrations of codes, as well as illustrations
of the remarkable personalities--many courageous, some villainous, and
all obsessive--who wrote and broke them.
All roads lead to the present day, in which the possibility
of a truly unbreakable code looms large. Singh explores this possibility,
and the ramifications of our increasing need for privacy, even as it
begins to chafe against the stated mission of the powerful and deeply
secretive National Security Agency. Entertaining, compelling, and remarkably
far-reaching, this is a book that will forever alter your view of history,
what drives it, and how private that e-mail you just sent really is.
Included in the book is a worldwide Cipher Challenge--a
$15,000 award will be given by the author to the first reader who cracks
the code successfully. Progress toward the solution will be tracked
on The Cipher Challenge website.
For more information on how to purchase The Code Book, please click here.