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Book Reviews

Review of Memories of My Work at the Cipher Bureau of the General Staff Second Department 1930–1945 by Marian Rejewski

Pages 167-174 | Published online: 01 Apr 2013
 

Acknowledgements

I thank Jan Bury for obtaining contact information for the publisher:

Adam Mickiewicz University Press

ul. Fredry 10

61-701 Poznan, Poland

E-mail: [email protected]

Web address: http://press.amu.edu.pl

Notes

1 Enigma ou la plus grande énigme de la guerre 1939–1945, which was published in 1973.

2Magdalena Jaroszewska (Editor-in-Chief), Marek Grajek, Jerzy Jaworski, and Tomasz Kubial.

4This conversation was recorded on 24 July 1978. The conversation also appears as [16].

5This paper was written in 1977.

6This paper appeared first in Polish in 1980. A slightly different version appears as [Citation13], which includes two Afterwords, one by Cipher A. Deavours and another by I. J. (Jack) Good.

7This appendix was an appendix to the Polish version of Enigma. A translation by Christopher Kasparek also appeared in Cryptologia [Citation14].

3Rejewski's “Memories” is a reference for Enigma.

8See “The Polish, French and British Contributions to the Breaking of the Enigma” [5, pp. 487–495].

9Another reference for the historical aspects of the Polish codebreakers is [Citation9]. One of the authors, Kozaczuk, is a historian who interviewed Rejewski and whose 1967 book Battle for the Secrets (in Polish) first told of the work of the Poles. A recent book by Z. J. Kapera in the Enigma Series [Citation7] tells the story of the Polish codebreakers in France. Kapera's book is brief and includes a bit too much detail about the number of messages decrypted, etc. The review in Cryptologia [Citation2] lists the other publications in the Enigma Series.

10The editors supply a proof in Note 35.

11See, for example, [Citation10], [Citation11], and [Citation12].

12See [Citation3] for a description of the machine.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Chris Christensen

Chris Christensen teaches mathematics and cryptology at Northern Kentucky University. His first encounter with the theory of Enigma was in Robert Harris' novel Enigma.

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