Many books have a section with acknowledgements and in that section you invariably find a mention of the patient editor at the relevant publishing house. Except in this book. There is the section with acknowledgements, but not a mentioning of the editor. And that is perhaps for a good reason because the book really could do with some editing.
Captain Jerry Roberts was already a rare vintage when he started on his project and he never got to see the final result. That shows in many respects.
Essentially, Roberts has a very important and interesting story to tell us, and while he does tell it, he also spends quite a number of pages on telling us, exactly how interesting and important the story is. But that is not necessary.
Lorenz was a German World War II cipher-machine that worked with teleprinters, i.e. what elderly people remember as a telex machine, and in this way different from Enigma, which was used to encipher old fashioned Morse telegraphy. It was considered a higher grade of cipher and it would have been even more difficult to break if the Germans had taken a bit more care. But they did not.
If you use a code only once then it can be virtually unbreakable, but using it just a few more times will render it open to read for the trained code breaker.
And that is what happened. The British learned how to read German traffic of even higher grade than Enigma. That of course was an even greater scoop and consequently an even greater secret, particularly after the war. Telex was the next generation of communications after Morse telegraphy and for decades after the war everybody used it. Telling the world that you had already busted one teleprinter cipher was not a good idea as long as teleprinters remained the communications method of choice for your adversaries.
So by the seventies we heard about Enigma, but not about British successes with the Lorenz cipher.
Jerry Roberts was the last remaining of the main characters in war time breaking of the Lorenz cipher. His story is fascinating.
And it leaves me wondering what other stories we have yet to hear, because they have been even more secret.
The book is adorned with superfluous forewords, dedications, introductions, acknowledgements etc. And it is marred by repeated long sections about how much the Lorenz code breakers have been put in the shadow of Enigma. All that should have been left out. What remained would have been a true page turner. And the good bit coould have been expanded considerably if somebody had put the right questions to the author.