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The Puzzle Palace: Inside the National Security Agency, America's Most Secret Intelligence Organization Paperback – September 29, 1983
Purchase options and add-ons
- Print length656 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherPenguin Publishing Group
- Publication dateSeptember 29, 1983
- Dimensions7.76 x 5.08 x 1.32 inches
- ISBN-100140067485
- ISBN-13978-0140067484
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book very interesting, great, and informative. They appreciate the detail and incredible insight into the dirty dealings of the world's most secretive organization. However, some customers feel the content is dated.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book very interesting, informative, and inspirational. They say it provides fascinating history. Readers also mention the book is of excellent quality.
"Very interesting and informative" Read more
"...a former military member and SIGINT operator, the history this book supplies is fascinating. It answered a lot of questions for me...." Read more
"This was an interesting beginning book about the history and background of the National Security Agency, especially in light of the very damaging..." Read more
"A good read, but it shines a light on a organization that has no limits . That is a concept that is counter to good government...." Read more
Customers find the book detailed yet readable. They say it provides great information on the inner workings of the CIA and other agencies. Readers also mention the book is well-written and hard to put down.
"...but nonfiction narratives have changed as well. This book is crammed with specifics but it reads like a textbook, which is about the way most..." Read more
"...I found it easy to read with details and a page turner. As good as “The Billion Dollar Spy”." Read more
"...Great information of the inner workings of the CIA and other agencies. I couldn't put this book down." Read more
"An incredible insight into the dirty dealings of the world's most secretive organisation." Read more
Customers find the content dated.
"...Because it's dated, and dry, I wouldn't recommend this book to casual readers...." Read more
"...The only problem is that this book is a bit dated, so it's hard to know how similar the early '80s Puzzle Palace compares with that of the early..." Read more
"Outdated--Misleading..." Read more
Customers find the book's pace sluggish.
"...This is not a John le Carre thriller; it does move slowly. But that doesn't mean it doesn't have its usefulness...." Read more
"...insights into the inner workings of the NSA, its sluggish pace diminishes its overall impact, leaving readers more exasperated than enlightened." Read more
"stopped reading after a chapter. Found it to be slow and boring" Read more
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Top reviews from the United States
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Since then, not only has the world of spydom changed (or at least I hope it has!!!), but nonfiction narratives have changed as well. This book is crammed with specifics but it reads like a textbook, which is about the way most nonfiction was written forty years ago. These days we expect and appreciate an easier reading experience--one that blends interesting narrative with otherwise dry facts.
Because it's dated, and dry, I wouldn't recommend this book to casual readers. If you're intrigued by the ins and outs of intelligence gathering and distribution, this book will provide some insight into how it's been done in the past. And when taken in this way, the book helped me understand how faulty our intelligence systems have been and how good they've been--at the same time.
But the book is probably going to be of most value to those interested in the history of secret agencies, the National Security Agency (NSA) in particular. Who ran the agency when, what types of intelligence they were gathering, how they distributed secret information across vast distances, which scandals most rocked the NSA's world, and how the agency became less secret are all covered.
When we consider that people as far removed as the leaders of Germany and Indonesia appear shocked by the 2013 revelations that NSA is spying on them, we can conclude either that they have never read this book or that they have and don't want to tell their citizens about it. In short, as Bamford points out, one or more members of the "5 Eyes Only" group has been spying on mass communications ever since the transatlantic cables were first laid, more than a century ago.
Another valuable part of this history is the laying to rest of some myths of WWII communications. Bamford's book is a good counterweight to books and articles emphasizing the Enigma device. I recall one author claiming that Roosevelt "knew" the Japanese were going to attack Pearl Harbor and "let" it happen. Bamford supplies the more complex, nuanced story of how the communications failed due to human error, not to any "conspiracy."
The afterword contains the story of Geoffrey Arthur Prime, which is the closest we get to a Le Carre style spy story. Prime was carrying on his work while the 1974 Le Carre novel, Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy was being written. See pages 502-532 in the paperback edition I have. Perhaps NSA should assign someone to read spy novels.
There is one major problem with this edition, but it doesn't seem to be the author's fault.The blurb on the back of the book claims that the book includes "information on the NSA's secret role" in "major world events of the 1980s and 1990s." The afterward ends with 1982. There's nothing after that: No "Korean Airlines disaster [Sept 1, 1983], Iran-Contra [1986], [nor] the Gulf War [1990-91]."
Readers counting on the book to cover these topics should complain to Penguin Books.
A bigger concern is Artificial Intelligence and what it could do to decryption and encryption. To me it seems that AI will do a fantastic job of creating Keys and do just as good a job, if not better, of deciphering Keys.
I understanding wanting to be thorough, but it is to a fault and can get overwhelming with minute details. It could have been shorter and been just as good. If you can wade through the names and dates, it is an interesting read.
The only other drawback is the date of the publication, which is 1982. An updated version would be great if it was possible.
You've got to read his latest - current book - SPY FAIL!
Top reviews from other countries
Un livre que doit posséder les personnes passionnées par les écoutes et l'espionnage.
on the agency...Mr. Bamford has emerged with everything except the combination to the director's safe."
-- The New York Times Book Review


