The woman all spies fear Code breaker Elizebeth Smith Friedman and her hidden life

Amy Butler Greenfield, 1968-

Book - 2021

"Biography of Elizebeth Smith Friedman, an American woman who pioneered codebreaking in WWI and WWII but was only recently recognized for her extraordinary contributions to the field"--

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Subjects
Genres
Young adult nonfiction
Biographies
Published
New York : Random House Studio [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Amy Butler Greenfield, 1968- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
328 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Audience
Ages 12+
Grades 7-9
950L
Awards
YALSA Award for Excellence in Nonfiction for Young Adults Honor, 2022.
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780593127193
9780593127209
  • The doll shop spy
  • Starting out
  • What do you know?
  • Code or cipher?
  • Riverbank
  • From bacon to binary
  • A dear good friend
  • The skeletons of words
  • Will we win?
  • The key to the cipher
  • Underlings
  • Hiding in plain sight
  • Don't be afraid to take a step
  • Escape
  • Rail fence love letter
  • At home
  • On the doorstep
  • The rum war
  • The making of her
  • Barbara's cipher
  • Firepower
  • Cracking a Conexco code
  • Fame
  • The trip of a lifetime
  • Turbulence
  • The black chamber
  • Ad absurdum!
  • Café cryptanalytique
  • The woman all spies fear
  • The war within
  • Heebeegeebees
  • Elizebeth's war
  • Code names and cribs
  • Sargo
  • Cracking Enigma
  • Solving in depth
  • A spy at sea
  • Overkill
  • Procedure 40
  • Secrets
  • The raid
  • Fallout
  • The last word
  • The library.
Review by Booklist Review

After graduating from college in 1915, Elizebeth Smith was recruited by a wealthy eccentric to join a team attempting to identify and decrypt secret messages in Shakespeare's First Folio. She enjoyed the challenge of decryption, and soon, as America prepared to enter WWI, she and her future husband, William Friedman, became the government's go-to experts for code breaking. Later, she continued to develop her expertise and train others while working for the Navy, the Coast Guard, the Treasury Department, and other government agencies, gathering evidence on Prohibition-era rumrunners, identifying wartime spies, and decoding enemy secrets. She raised a family while working tirelessly at demanding jobs that remained secret for decades, until relevant documents were declassified. This well-researched volume delves into Elizebeth Smith Friedman's youth, her unconventional route to her profession, her relationship with her supportive spouse, her accomplishments in cryptology, and her sometimes troubling experiences as a twentieth-century woman working in a "man's field." Occasional vintage photos and code-related challenges in sidebars enhance the presentation. An engrossing book for readers intrigued by codes, cyphers, and espionage.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This comprehensive biography centers Elizebeth Smith Friedman (1892--1980), one of America's most important and little-known code breakers, who had a profound impact on WWI and WWII. Greenfield thoroughly covers Friedman's life, from her repressive childhood; college education; early introduction to codes in a research program run by an eccentric millionaire; marriage to and partnership with brilliant fellow cryptanalyst William Friedman; and varied government career and later life. While coverage of Friedman's extended professional machinations slows the pace, the book proves strongest as it ably chronicles how her skills developed and homes in on codes and code breaking. Recurring offset feature "Code Breaker" offers fascinating details on the mechanics, such as "Rail Fence Love Letter," a coded love note; "Solving in Depth," which highlights Friedman's work on the famous Nazi Enigma code; and "The Last Word," which reveals how Friedman even employed a code on her husband's tombstone. B&w photographs help round out the history, alongside primary sources such as news stories and even Friedman's own handwritten notes. A captivating account of the life and critical contributions of "one of the most formidable code breakers in the world." Back matter includes a bibliography and notes. Ages 12--up. (Oct.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 8 Up--Most people have likely never heard of Elizebeth Smith Friedman, but she is one of the most prolific code breakers in U.S. history. Often overshadowed by her husband, with whom she worked closely, this biographical account of her life brings her story to young adult readers. From falling into code breaking by landing a job for an eccentric millionaire during a visit to the library to falling in love with a fellow code breaker and working her way through two world wars solving ciphers and more, Smith Friedman's life story is a fascinating one. The book follows a linear time line, from her birth and childhood all the way to how she has been recognized and commended post-humously. Each chapter ends on a cliff-hanger, which helps to make a sometimes slow-paced narrative more engaging. There are also sections that break up the chapters called "Code Breaks," which give more detail on either the subject's work or the ciphers themselves. This narrative is very dense at times, but the level of detail and interesting topic make up for that. The back matter includes a bibliography and notes from each chapter. VERDICT A worthy purchase for secondary school libraries and where there are gaps in historical biography sections, especially about women in STEM.--Molly Dettmann, Norman North H.S., OK

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

This biography of a groundbreaking cryptanalyst is entwined with crucial episodes in U.S. history. Thorough research and accessible, enthusiastic writing create a page-turning read as thrilling as a spy novel. The text begins with Elizebeth Smith's childhood: born in Indiana in 1892 to a Civil War veteran father and a former teacher mother, both devout Christians, she was determined to attend college despite her father's opposition. She succeeded, finding her way to Chicago, where a library visit led to a research job working for eccentric millionaire Col. Fabyan at his estate, Riverbank. There she met a Russian-born fellow employee, her future husband, William Friedman. They eventually comprised Fabyan's Department of Ciphers and married despite both families' religious objections (William was Jewish). Almost unbelievable adventures ensued as the couple practiced their craft and plotted their escape from Riverbank's maniacal owner. Elizebeth's skills enabled the prosecution of alcohol-smuggling criminals during Prohibition. The couple's work also saved lives and helped capture spies during both world wars. Between the wars, they threw elaborate code-breaking parties. Sadly, they also contended with antisemitism, misogyny, and William's mental health issues; nonetheless, the tone overall is compelling and upbeat. Nearly every chapter about this intrepid, intelligent, energetic woman ends with a cliffhanger whose promise is fulfilled in the following one. Elizebeth's life unfolded against a backdrop of some of the 20th century's most pivotal events, and this riveting title is a fine tribute to her accomplishments. Inspiring, informative, and entertaining. (bibliography, notes) (Biography. 12-18) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter One The Doll Shop Spy In 1942, in the middle of World War II, some strange letters came to the attention of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. They were all addressed to the same person in Argentina, and they all sounded oddly alike, yet they came from four different American women. The letters were about dolls, and they ran like this: I have been so very busy these days, this is the first time I have been over to Seattle for weeks. I came over today to meet my son who is here from Portland on business and to get my little granddaughters doll repaired. I must tell you this amusing story, the wife of an important business associate gave her an Old German bisque Doll dressed in a Hulu Grass skirt . . . When the FBI questioned the women who supposedly had sent the letters, the women knew nothing about them. FBI lab experts confirmed that the women's signatures were excellent forgeries. Someone knew these women well enough to fake their handwriting. Someone was hiding behind their names. Could it be a spy? The FBI kept digging for clues. The four women lived in different cities and didn't know each other, but it turned out they had something in common. All of them were long-distance customers of a doll shop at 718 Madison Avenue in New York City. The FBI checked out the shop. Filled with pricey dolls in fancy costumes, it didn't look like the headquarters of a spy ring. The shop's owner, Velvalee Dickinson, appeared innocent, too. A graduate of Stanford University, she was a fifty-year-old widow who had been in the doll business since 1937. She and her late husband had once been friends with many Japanese officials, but that was before Japan and the United States had gone to war. The FBI remained leery. They staked out the doll shop, and they examined Dickinson's bank account and safe-deposit box. In January 1944, after they traced some of her money back to Japanese sources, they arrested her as a spy. Dickinson fought back. Tiny, dark-haired, and delicate, she screamed and kicked, scratching at the FBI agents like a wildcat. The money had nothing to do with spies, she insisted when they questioned her. It came from her doll business and insurance payouts. The FBI was worried. While they'd been able to connect Dickinson to the letters, they weren't sure how to interpret them. The money trail was also murky, with no clear proof of a link to spymasters. Everything was guesswork, which wouldn't impress anyone when the case went to trial. One of the lawyers who had to prosecute the case was U.S. attorney Edward Wallace. He had plenty of courtroom experience, and he knew it was time to seek help. He also knew exactly who he wanted to approach--one of America's top code breakers, Elizebeth Smith Friedman. Like Dickinson, Elizebeth was also small, dark-haired, and college-educated, but the resemblance ended there. As a young woman, she had played a key role in code breaking during World War I. She later cracked the codes of American mobsters, smashing their crime gangs. Now, in 1944, she had a top-secret job at the Navy. Wallace believed that if anyone could crack the Doll Woman letters, it was Elizebeth. But when he asked the FBI if he could put her onto the case, the FBI balked. It wasn't that they doubted her skill. They had worked with her many times before, so they knew just how good she was. As they saw it, the problem was that Elizebeth was too good. They couldn't stand the thought that the credit for catching Dickinson might go to her, and not to the FBI. When it came down to it, however, the FBI needed a conviction. After an initial protest, they allowed Wallace to share the Doll Woman letters with Elizebeth. Luckily for them, the Navy wanted her skills to remain secret, so her name had to be kept out of the record. In case documents, she would be called "Confidential Informant T4." Although Elizebeth was busy tracking Nazi spies, she made time to look at the Doll Woman letters. At first, she was given very little background to go on, but even so, she made progress. Soon she was startling everyone with her insights. As she explained to Wallace, the letters were written in what was called "open code." This meant that ordinary sentences and phrases had been given secret meanings, agreed upon in advance. These phrases were then strung together in ways that made the letter seem more or less natural to a casual reader. Elizebeth warned Wallace that the precise meaning of this kind of code was hard to prove. There was usually a certain amount of guesswork involved, and that would make the case a challenge to prosecute. Yet her analysis was shrewd and hard-hitting. Take these sentences, for instance, from a Doll Woman letter dated February 22, 1942: The only new dolls I have are three lovely Irish dolls. One of these three dolls is an old Fisherman with a Net over his back, another is an old woman with wood on her back and the third is a little boy. Elizebeth believed that Dickinson was using "doll" to mean "ship." The different dolls stood for different kinds of vessels. The "old Fisherman with a Net" was probably a minesweeper. The "old woman with wood on her back" might be a ship with a high upper deck. The "little boy" could be a small warship, perhaps a destroyer or torpedo boat. Elizebeth worked out the likely meaning of many other words, too. When the letters mentioned "family," they referred to either the Japanese fleet or other agents, depending on context. The "visit of important gentleman's wife" was probably an "invitation to the Japanese Navy to bomb the harbor." The phrases "Mr. Shaw" and "back to work" were a warning that the USS Shaw, a damaged destroyer, would soon be ready for action again. Elizebeth also pinpointed phrases that identified Dickinson as a secret agent. She could tell that Dickinson was a layperson where ships were concerned, and she made smart guesses about where and how Dickinson had obtained her information. Elizebeth even found clues indicating who else might be involved in the spy ring. After she traveled to New York to get additional case details, she was able to say still more about the letters. Her findings were sent to the FBI, and the prosecution used them to strengthen their case. In August 1944, Dickinson was sentenced to ten years of jail time. The FBI and the newspapers were quick to proclaim that "the War's No. 1 Woman Spy" had been put behind bars. Elizebeth was not mentioned. Elizebeth had mixed feelings about that. For security reasons, she knew she had to stay out of the limelight. If the Nazis ever learned how good she was at code breaking, it would hamper her efforts to bring their spies down. But it annoyed her to see the FBI taking credit for her work. It wasn't the first time that Elizebeth had been pushed into the shadows, nor was it the last. On the FBI's public website, the account of the Doll Woman case still omits any mention of her, even though the need for secrecy is long past. Married to William Friedman, one of the best code breakers of all time, she is often mentioned merely as his wife. Yet as William himself was quick to point out, Elizebeth was brilliant, too. Like the open code in Dickinson's letters, Elizebeth could appear ordinary on the surface. Even now, she is easily underestimated. To get her true measure, you must delve deeper, the way a code breaker would, searching for the truth that lies just out of sight. Elizebeth did not have an easy start in life. Yet she rose to become one of the most formidable code breakers in the world, the scourge of gangsters and spies. How did she do it? Ambition and grit played a part, but she needed opportunity, too. She found it in a library--and in one of the strangest job offers of the century. Chapter Two Starting Out Elizebeth rarely talked about what her life was like before she became a code breaker. She didn't save much from those early years, either. Look in her files, and you'll find only a few papers, a slim diary, and a handful of old photos from that time. It was a chapter of her life that she kept to herself. To discover who she was when she started out, you have to comb through all the evidence she left behind, and then go hunt for more. A faded few lines on a census form. A remark made in jest. An old house that still stands square to the road. Like scattered bits of code, none of these snippets gives away much on its own. But piece them together, and the real story starts to emerge. What you see, early on, is that young Elizebeth Smith was determined to be different. Sensitive to the weight and meaning of letters and words, she wanted even her name to set her apart. There was nothing she could do about her surname--the "odious name of Smith," as she put it in her college diary. Yet she detested that "most meaningless of phrases, 'plain Miss Smith.' " To her mind, it implied that she was "eliminated from any category even approaching anything interesting." It must have been a comfort that her first name was unusual, if only in its spelling. Her mother, Sopha Strock Smith, had called her Clara Elizebeth. It was the Elizebeth part that stuck, spelled with an "e" in the middle, rather than with the standard "a." Family legend had it that Sopha wanted to avoid the nickname Eliza. Perhaps it was also her way of encouraging Elizebeth to stand out from the crowd. Sopha was Elizebeth's champion--and Elizebeth certainly needed one. Born on August 26, 1892, she was Sopha's youngest surviving child, with eight older brothers and sisters. They all lived in a brick house that Elizebeth's grandfather had built, on the Smith family farm in Union Township, a few miles east of Huntington, Indiana. Delicate by nature, with wavy brown hair and hazel eyes, Elizebeth was a tiny presence in that huge family. It was a position that frustrated her. Prone to nausea and stomach problems, she remembered her early years as "as one continual period of throwing up." Home was a tense place because Elizebeth and her father did not get along. John Marion Smith had served in the Union Army as a teenager, marching with General Sherman in the Civil War. The experience had soured him, but he was widely respected as a veteran and a good farmer. A staunch Republican, he was also elected to local office. By nature, he was a rigid and controlling man, and he did not think much of females. Sopha tried to shield Elizebeth from his temper. To Elizebeth, Sopha was her "wonderful little Mother"--a smart and curious woman who was interested in everyone. Like Elizebeth, Sopha was small and dark-haired, and she, too, had been the youngest child in her family. Educated at one of the most advanced schools in rural Indiana, she became a teacher. After she married John Smith when she was twenty-four, she centered her life around family and church, yet she often told fond stories about her student days. Most likely, it was Sopha who spurred Elizebeth to get a good education. She also gave her daughter backbone. "My mother encouraged me to go my own way," Elizebeth once said. The lesson stayed with her for life. Elizebeth had a quick mind, and she did well in her studies. At first, she walked to the small Antioch School near the family farm. Later, she and her parents moved into nearby Huntington, where she went to high school. Drawn to words in any language, she took four years of German and five years of Latin. She had a strong voice despite her small frame, and she spoke with "rare force and effectiveness," winning the class orator prize. At a time when nine out of ten students never even graduated from high school, she was aiming at college. Excerpted from The Woman All Spies Fear: Code Breaker Elizebeth Smith Friedman and Her Hidden Life by Amy Butler Greenfield All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.