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  1. 2 de out. de 2018 · Liza Mundy is an award-winning journalist and the New York Times bestselling author of five books, including CODE GIRLS, and her latest, THE SISTERHOOD. Published in 2017, CODE GIRLS tells the story of more than 10,000 female code breakers recruited during World War II to perform work that saved countless lives, shortened a global war, and pioneered the modern computer and cybersecurity ...

    • Liza Mundy
  2. 22 de jun. de 2022 · Liza Mundy is a journalist and New York Times best-selling author Credit: Getty This number comes from her journalism career as well as the success of her books. Mundy's Code Girls, which was published in 2017, became a New York Times best-seller, a Washington Post best-seller, and a Wall Street Journal best-seller after selling more than 200,000 copies.

  3. Liza Mundy Award-winning journalist & NYT Bestselling Author of CODE GIRLS | My new book THE SISTERHOOD: THE SECRET HISTORY OF WOMEN AT THE CIA is out Oct 17, 2023 Author, journalist, speaker at Crown

    • 1K followers
  4. 28 de fev. de 2019 · The award-winning New York Times bestseller about the American women who secretly served as codebreakers during World War II--a "prodigiously researched and ...

    • 50 min
    • 4,8K
    • Talks at Google
  5. www.linkedin.com › in › liza-mundy-a5a50419Liza Mundy | LinkedIn

    Liked by Liza Mundy Looking forward to this street renaming ceremony on June 28, 2023 in Ville de Petit-Quevilly Rouen, France in honor of LTC Charity Adams, 6888th…

    • 860 followers
  6. LIZA MUNDY is a staff writer at The Washington Post, where for more than ten years she has covered politics, popular culture, and women’s issues. She is a regular contributor to the online magazine Slate and participates in their women’s blog, XX Factor. She has also written for Lingua Franca, Redbook, Mother Jones, Washington City Paper ...

  7. www.lizamundy.com › code-girls › gallery-2Gallery | Liza Mundy

    Gallery | Liza Mundy. Gallery. Genevieve Grotjan aspired to be a math professor but couldn’t find a university willing to hire a woman. In September 1940, after less than a year as a civilian Army code breaker, she made a key break that enabled the Allies to eavesdrop on Japanese diplomatic communications for the entirety of World War II.