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Books in Code Breakers and Spies series

  • Code Breakers and Spies of World War II

    Cathleen Small

    Paperback (Cavendish Square Publishing, Aug. 15, 2018)
    Code breakers and spies are the stuff of legend and intrigue, but in reality, they dramatically impacted wars and influenced society, as well as altered the field of information technology. Technology during the 1940s was primitive by today's standards, but spying and cryptography were cutting edge for the time. Many have heard of the use of Navajo code talkers during World War II, but this text explores the code talkers and beyond to paint a vivid picture of how cryptography and spy technology shaped the conflict.
    Y
  • Code Breakers and Spies of the Civil War

    Andrew Coddington

    Library Binding (Cavendish Square Publishing, Aug. 15, 2018)
    The United States in the 1860s seemed poised to become one of the world's leading powers. Even with the benefits of new innovations such as the railroad and the telegraph, which brought the country together, unresolved issues between the North and the South broke the country in half. This book explores the ways in which the day's new technologies changed the face of warfare and how, in this bloody war for unity, spies from all walks of life, including immigrants, women, and black people, contributed to the struggle.
    S
  • Code Breakers and Spies of World War I

    Jeanne Marie Ford

    Paperback (Cavendish Square Publishing, Aug. 15, 2018)
    The world's great economic powers aligned into two opposing forces in World War I. Although still in its infancy by modern standards at the onset of the conflict, intelligence gathering and espionage would ultimately tip the balance. Readers learn how new technology exploded and resulted in developments in cryptography and surveillance as both sides raced to crack the codes and win the war.
    Y
  • Code Breakers and Spies of the American Revolution

    Cassandra Schumacher

    Paperback (Cavendish Square Publishing, Aug. 15, 2018)
    The American Revolution was a war fought by soldiers and won by spies. The Continental Army did not stand a chance against the British superpower, but with accurate and fast intelligence, General George Washington was able to gain an advantage and win the war. From early intrigue in France to the Culper Spy Ring in New York, this book explores it all. Readers will learn how the first American spies turned the tides of the war and helped win independence.
    R
  • Code Breakers and Spies of the Cold War

    Avery Elizabeth Hurt

    Paperback (Cavendish Square Publishing, Aug. 15, 2018)
    After being uneasy allies in World War II, the 1950s saw the United States and the Soviet Union entering the Cold War, a thirty-year conflict in which the adversaries never went into physical battle with each other but fought many proxy wars in other nations. This gripping and fast-paced book traces the Cold War through the lens of spying and code breaking by showing how advances in computer technology and mathematics kept the technology race every bit as nerve-racking as the arms race that characterized the conflict.
    V
  • Code Breakers and Spies of the Vietnam War

    Andrew Coddington

    Paperback (Cavendish Square Publishing, Aug. 15, 2018)
    "A book for high school students about the code breaking and espionage done during the Vietnam War"--
    V
  • Code Breakers and Spies of the Civil War

    Andrew Coddington

    Paperback (Cavendish Square Publishing, Aug. 15, 2018)
    The United States in the 1860s seemed poised to become one of the world's leading powers. Even with the benefits of new innovations such as the railroad and the telegraph, which brought the country together, unresolved issues between the North and the South broke the country in half. This book explores the ways in which the day's new technologies changed the face of warfare and how, in this bloody war for unity, spies from all walks of life, including immigrants, women, and black people, contributed to the struggle.
    Y
  • Code Breakers and Spies of the American Revolution

    Cassandra Schumacher

    Library Binding (Cavendish Square Publishing, Aug. 15, 2018)
    The American Revolution was a war fought by soldiers and won by spies. The Continental Army did not stand a chance against the British superpower, but with accurate and fast intelligence, General George Washington was able to gain an advantage and win the war. From early intrigue in France to the Culper Spy Ring in New York, this book explores it all. Readers will learn how the first American spies turned the tides of the war and helped win independence.
    S
  • Code Breakers and Spies of the Cold War

    Avery Elizabeth Hurt

    Library Binding (Cavendish Square, Aug. 15, 2018)
    After being uneasy allies in World War II, the 1950s saw the United States and the Soviet Union entering the Cold War, a thirty-year conflict in which the adversaries never went into physical battle with each other but fought many proxy wars in other nations. This gripping and fast-paced book traces the Cold War through the lens of spying and code breaking by showing how advances in computer technology and mathematics kept the technology race every bit as nerve-racking as the arms race that characterized the conflict.
    Y
  • Code Breakers and Spies of World War II

    Cathleen Small

    Library Binding (Cavendish Square Publishing, Aug. 15, 2018)
    Code breakers and spies are the stuff of legend and intrigue, but in reality, they dramatically impacted wars and influenced society, as well as altered the field of information technology. Technology during the 1940s was primitive by today's standards, but spying and cryptography were cutting edge for the time. Many have heard of the use of Navajo code talkers during World War II, but this text explores the code talkers and beyond to paint a vivid picture of how cryptography and spy technology shaped the conflict.
    Y
  • Code Breakers and Spies of the War on Terror

    Elizabeth Schmermund

    Library Binding (Cavendish Square Publishing, Aug. 15, 2018)
    Shortly after the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon on September 11, 2001, the U.S. government began both a ground and aerial military campaign in the Middle East in order to preemptively rout out terrorists. During the War on Terror, the cause of the United States and its allies was aided by many technical innovations in code breaking and espionage. In fact, increased surveillance went so far as to spy on regular citizens. This book explores the evolution of intelligence technologies and how these new methods controversially shape wars, and the dilemma many militaries and governments face in deciding how to use them in order to avoid political fallout in the global age of terrorism.
    Y
  • Code Breakers and Spies of the Vietnam War

    Andrew Coddington

    Library Binding (Cavendish Square Publishing, Aug. 15, 2018)
    "A book for high school students about the code breaking and espionage done during the Vietnam War"--
    V