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Review: In the Shadows of Enigma

Mathilde Frot reads some factual fiction

August 5, 2021 11:19
Enigma Code deciphering machine at Bletchley alamy ECEBAC
ECEBAC The Nazi German Enigma cipher machine used during World War II to develop nearly unbreakable codes for sending messages. The Enigma's settings offered 150,000,000,000,000,000,000 possible solutions. Allied efforts based in Bletchley Park, England were eventually able to crack the code using the worldOs first electromagnetic computers.
1 min read

In the Shadows of Enigma
By Alex Rosenberg
Top Hat Books, £13.99

Reviewed by Mathilde Frot

In the Europe of the aftermath of the Second World War, Rita Feuerstahl, a traumatised Jewish refugee, puts pen to paper and writes about the horrors she has endured. She recalls the loved-ones she lost, including Stefan — her son — who was smuggled out of a Polish ghetto and left behind for his own safety. But another spectre haunts her life: a state secret kept under wraps for 30 years that she stumbled upon during the war.

Alex Rosenberg’s latest piece of historical fiction — a stand-alone sequel to his The Girl From Krakow — is a Cold-War romp through Europe, Australia and America, which culminates in a feverish chase across the snow-capped hills of the French Alps.

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