Tunnustatud ajaloolase Kristie Macrakise koostatud esimene täielik salakirja ajalugu toob lugejani hulgaliselt lugusid kelmidest ja kangelastest ning nende leidlikest meetoditest salajaste sõnumite edastamisel. Ülipõnev intriigide ja spionaaži, armastuse ja sõja, teaduse ja maagia ajalugu pajatab salapärastest nähtustest, geniaalsetest avastustest ja kangelaslikest tegudest ning ulatub muistsest maailmast tänase päevani välja. Käsitlemist leiavad Herodotose vahatahvlite kirjeldused ja Ovidiuse õpetused piimaga salakirjade kirjutamiseks, George Washingtoni “sümpaatilise peitsi” roll Ameerika iseseisvussõjas ja kirglike teadlaste panus salakirja arengusse, Teise maailmasõja aegsed Saksa spioonid, kes peitsid salatinti hambas või immutasid sellega taskurätte, ameeriklasi hämmastanud mikrotäpp-tehnika, külma sõja aegsete luureagentuuride ponnistused, al-Qaedas loodud kõrgtehnoloogiline digitaalne steganograafiasüsteem ja palju muud.
Salajane kiri aitas päästa elusid, võita lahinguid ning hoida saladusi. Abitus ja käpardlikkus salajaste sõnumite kirjutamisel ja edastamisel võis aga päädida vangi langemise ja hukkamisega, õnnetu armastuse ja kaotatud lahinguga. Nii mõnigi kord muutis edukalt läkitatud salajane sõnum ajaloo käiku.
Kristie Macrakis is Professor of History in the School of History and Sociology at Georgia Tech. She is the author of many books, including Seduced by Secrets and Prisoners, Lovers, and Spies.
if you ever counted the days until your Captain Midnight Secret Decoder Ring arrived in the mail, or wrote a note with lemon juice, or enjoyed an Ian Fleming novel, this book’s a treat. And an eye-opener, no matter what. And fun.
This book is written on a fascinating subject: the history of hidden writing from ancient times to the present. It's clear that the author has searched far and wide for declassified information, recipes, and other details to draw the reader in. There are multiple historical photographs and images of hidden writing that has been "developed." Four stars for the content.
The problem with this book, in my opinion, is in the editing. A couple of the pictures seemed amateurish, one was a facsimile of a comic book taken at a skew angle, another was a photograph of a diorama, presumably from a museum display. The text had instances where similar descriptions showed up more than once in the same chapter, a problem that is not always obvious in the writing process but should have been caught and corrected during editing. Page 297, for example, tells us that the NSA release "...boasts 895 secret-ink samples, tests, and effects of developers, a much more thorough and complete set of documents than the CIA...." Two pages later, we are told, "...the NSA material on 895 secret-ink tests is much more revealing about secret-ink methods than that from the CIA."
I received this book as a First Reads winner, and will be happily keeping my copy for future reference.
Published in 2014, 'Prisoners, Lovers, & Spies' tells the story of the history and development of hidden writing methods on use over many hundreds of years. Whilst this often means descriptions of the times that spies have written messages in invisible ink made from lemon juice, is does also describe many far more sophisticated and bizarre methods. Much of the book deals with details of cases where spies were unmasked during wartime, so not surprisingly the book gathers pace from the early 20th century. Very interesting and very enjoyable.
An engrossing read and lively history about invisible writing and the entertaining misadventures of the colorful characters who used it. Engaging and well-written.
The author did a terrific job with her research. I can't imagine there is another book that has as much detail about secret messages. This a great reference book. I won this in a Goodreads giveaway.
I really wanted to like this book. I heard an interview with Kristie Macrakis on NPR, and she sounded so enthusiastic, and her promised premise of fascinating reveals of secret writing is certainly compelling.
Unfortunately, I ended up feeling like the book was rushed to press, or somehow unfinished. Macrakis has a way of just throwing information at the reader, but without taking the time to develop a coherent narrative or thesis. Honestly, it reads the way my old term papers read, when i'd stay up the night before cramming any fact I could glean from the encyclopedia.
And its a shame, because Macrakis has a ton of well-researched information. She is particularly knowledgeable when it comes to 20th century espionage, but she did a credible job of including the early years, and the modern era of computerized steganography. She also obviously finds the material very compelling, and wants to share that interest with her reader.
So, I'm torn. I guess, read it for the facts and some of the isolated stories, but expect it to be easy.
I read this for research because I was writing a book featuring a scene with invisible ink. Good enough for that. Not very well written, but a tolerable collection of stories about spies and lovers and terrorists communicating in some form of secret writing. Made me want a better book on the same stuff.
Interesting subject. I remember using lemon juice for secret writing when I was a girl just like many other children but I never thought there was so much more to SW. I'm going to love trying the secret ink recipes with my children and telling them these stories.