Ratings112
Average rating4.3
Joining the elite Bletchley Park codebreaking team during World War II, three women from very different walks of life uncover a spy's dangerous agenda years later against the backdrop of the royal wedding of Elizabeth and Philip.
Reviews with the most likes.
Bletchley Park codebreakers: Osla, Mab and Beth. Fabulous historical fiction of female role in WWII. A hard book to put down, even at 600+ pages.
Such a good, well-plotted story! It would make an excellent limited series. Netflix should get on that.
Wow. All the feels. I make no secret that Alan Turing is a personal hero. He is very much suspected of being a fellow Autistic, and because of his brilliance I was able to follow in his footsteps to rise myself out of being a trailer park kid into a career that has already made me far more successful than I ever dared imagine. So when a book is set at Bletchley Park during World War II - where Turing built the first physical “Turing Machines” after having theorized them before the war - ... it gets my attention.
And while Turing himself (along with a handful of other particularly significant real-world people of the era) does appear in the book - and even helps in the endgame itself - this book is NOT about him. Instead, this is effectively a book about the other people there at Bletchley during the period and what they went through... while spinning a tight tale of personal and national betrayals as a solid fiction story should. :) We see the era and the place through three very different eyes - a likely (female) Autistic (though Quinn never uses that word to describe the character, as it wouldn't be period-authentic) who is over-protected by her very religious parents (gee, where does that feel familiar? ;) ), a poor, down on her luck girl from the “wrong side of the tracks” just trying to get by and become better than her birth (again, where does this seem familiar? :D), and a well-connected socialite who wants to prove that she is more than just her birth. And we see how friendship and even family can grow between such disparate people. Truly an outstanding work that hooks you from Chapter 1 and keeps you reading through the final words... even though those words come over 650 pages later! Oh, and if you're familiar with The Imitation Game (the 2014 movie focusing on Turing's work at BP)... you may just have its theme running through your head when you finish this tale. Very much recommended.
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4,125 booksWhen you think back on every book you've ever read, what are some of your favorites? These can be from any time of your life – books that resonated with you as a kid, ones that shaped your personal...