"The Codebreakers of Bletchley Park" gives readers some of the history of the now famous Bletchley Park and the people behind the amazing work. It gives us a strong basis in Britain's codebreaking during the first World War and how Bletchley Park began with many of the same people from the first War's group before expanding to the thousands of mathematicians, historians, physicists, and language experts who stayed through the war. Every few pages, in a separate section from the main text, Turing provides a short biography of one of the people he's currently talking about- their education, what they did after the war, etc. When these biographies were fitted into ongoing text they became a bit distracting, but if they were at the end of a text section it worked better.
I went into this book figuring that Dermot Turing, as the nephew of famous Bletchley Park alum Alan Turing, would focus mostly on Alan and those who came into his orbit. It would have been understandable. But I was pleasantly surprised by the expanse of people talked about, with in fact no emphasis on Turing at all. That said, the people mostly blended together for me after awhile, and by the end of the book I don't think I could point out one unique fact about any of the people involved. The discussions about the machines designed, built, and used were fairly basic, and while I learned a bit about the different Enigma machines used and how different techniques were needed to break each one, that was about it. Sadly, the book wasn't as interesting as I had hoped and didn't really add to my limited knowledge or understanding of Bletchley Park or the people who broke some of the most important codes in the war.
I received an ARC of this book from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.