
The Secret Codebreakers
The Untold Story of Black Women Cryptologists and the War Against Stalin's Bomb
Sarah Valentine(Author)
Robinson (Publisher)
Published on 4. June 2026
Book
Hardback
368 pages
978-1-4721-4810-0 (ISBN)
Description
Hidden Figures meets The Imitation Game in this never-before-told true story of the segregated Black code breakers who helped America win the Cold War, set amid the civil rights movement.
This is the shocking true story of the Black American codebreaking unit whose top-secret work led directly to the end of the Cold War.
Facing the global threat of a rising Communist world power in the aftermath of World War II, the US employed hundreds of Black Americans to speed read Russian communications and gather essential information on the US's most dangerous nuclear rival.
The result was the creation of a segregated civilian codebreaking unit known as the Traffic Processing Division - The Plantation. Despite wage discrimination, gruelling hours and harsh conditions, the Plantation's 100 college-educated Black women made invaluable breakthroughs in United States' Soviet intelligence, even as the backlash against civil rights eroded their democratic freedoms at home.
Sarah Valentine tells their remarkable story in full for the first time. Paying long overdue tribute to these little-known Black cryptologists' critical contributions to national security during the civil rights era and the Cold War.
This is the shocking true story of the Black American codebreaking unit whose top-secret work led directly to the end of the Cold War.
Facing the global threat of a rising Communist world power in the aftermath of World War II, the US employed hundreds of Black Americans to speed read Russian communications and gather essential information on the US's most dangerous nuclear rival.
The result was the creation of a segregated civilian codebreaking unit known as the Traffic Processing Division - The Plantation. Despite wage discrimination, gruelling hours and harsh conditions, the Plantation's 100 college-educated Black women made invaluable breakthroughs in United States' Soviet intelligence, even as the backlash against civil rights eroded their democratic freedoms at home.
Sarah Valentine tells their remarkable story in full for the first time. Paying long overdue tribute to these little-known Black cryptologists' critical contributions to national security during the civil rights era and the Cold War.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Little, Brown Book Group
Product notice
Trade binding
Illustrations
8pp mono
Dimensions
Height: 238 mm
Width: 154 mm
Thickness: 36 mm
Weight
580 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-4721-4810-0 (9781472148100)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Sarah Valentine
The Secret Codebreakers
The Untold Story of Black Women Cryptologists and the War Against Stalin's Bomb
E-Book
06/2026
Robinson
€16.99
Available for download
Person
Sarah Valentine is one of the few Black Slavists in the United States, with a PhD from Princeton in Russian literature and a BA in Creative Writing from Carnegie Mellon, Valentine is an incisive writer with a command of Russian language and culture, Cold War intelligence, and civil rights history.