Cover Image: The Rose Code

The Rose Code

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Member Reviews

When I saw Kate Quinn had a new book out I couldn't wait to read it. I loved The Huntress and The Alice Network and was quite excited to see it available for request on NetGalley. I thoroughly enjoyed The Rose Code. It features three very different women who work in different capacities breaking secret German codes during World War II. Osla is a debutante, Mab is from a less fortunate area of London and is determined to pull herself up out of the the life she was born into, and Beth is an introvert with surprising talents she didn't realize she had. Throw an actual Prince and a traitor no one expects into the mix an you have an interesting read.

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Kate Quinn does it again! The Rose Code is a hefty 650+ page read that is so well written and intricately crafted, you don't really want it to end.

The story follows three very different women who each have strong character arcs and compelling storylines. All three are rich in complexity, with personalities and motivations that captured me as a reader. But what I loved most was this beautiful portrait of their evolving friendship and how that changed over time.

The setting is fascinating. The story is epic. With historical interest, romance, and a little bit of mystery, this is a story that I thoroughly enjoyed and definitely recommend.

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Kate Quinn paints a vivid picture of what it was like to work in a special code breaking section of the British armed forces during World War II. She follows the lives of three very different women from different upbringings who become friends as they do their specific parts to break the Enigma codes of the German and Italian military. Mab's goal beyond contributing to the war effort is to find herself a husband, while Beth's is simply to find herself. Osla is out to prove that she's not just a "silly deb." Their lives and friendships are torn apart with love, loss, and deception and they go their separate ways only to be drawn together by one of the girls' message rom an insane asylum to the others and a Russian code, the Rose Code, that holds secrets of a traitor among the code breakers.

I love how Quinn weaves the real life history of Prince Phillip and Queen Elizabeth into the story by creating a relationship between Osla and the prince. Even though I've studied the history of the monarchy, at times I forgot that this was a fictional story altogether. Her characters are resilient in the face of the personal traumas that they all face. They reminded me that we all get knocked down, but it's our responsibility to stand back up, and above all, keep doing the right thing.

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3 young women sign on to be code-breakers at Bletchley Park and are the very best of friends for years. Until one of them betrays the others nothing in their lives is ever the same again. Kate Quinn does a fabulous job of teasing out little-known stories in history and making them come to life with all the intrigue and heartbreak of wartime.

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Per The Author's Own Words...
The Rose Code Is An...
“The Imitation Game meets The Crown”!

Three Women Who Would Never Meet...
But For A Desire To Be More...
More Than What Society Says...

One Who Rubs Elbows With Royalty...
Another Who Wants to Find A Leg Up...
If Marrying Better...
Then So Be It...

Those Two Seeing Another Woman...
Who Needs To Spread Her Wings...

Three Woman Who Are Part...
Of Something Important...
They Are Designated To...
Be The Secret Weapons Of World War II...

Friendships Happen...
Bonds Made...
Only To Be Betrayed...

But Even With All That Happens...
Nothing Will Stop Them...
From Protecting Each Other And...

The Rose Code-March 9, 2021

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Kate Quinn is amazing! I have loved her previous works and this novel is no exception. "The Rose Code" is about three women during WWII who are working as "code breakers" at Bletchley Park. It was fascinating to learn about this piece of history - Ms. Quinn always does her research so well and shines a special light on women during the "Great War"! There is also the human element, of how these relationships develop, and then fall apart in betrayal, which of course makes the reader stay with the much quickly than it's page count would have you believe. I would imagine this book would be high on many 2021 reading lists! VERY HIGHLY RECOMMEND! My thanks to the author, publisher and NetGalley for the ARC...

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I had never read any of Kate Quinn's work before this, but the second I was done with this, I put several of her other novels on hold. This was just exactly what I didn't know I needed, a historical mystery focusing on three young women who worked at Bletchley Park during World War II. One is a translator, one a codebreaker, and one sort of a jack of all trades who ends up running bombe machines. Structurally, this moves between two timelines: during the war, and a few years after it's over. One of the main characters sends a coded message to her former friends, referring to a betrayal among the three of them as well as evidence of a traitor from their Bletchley park days. The three main characters are wonderfully written, and the way their story unfolds blends historical detail with realistic character development in a really effective way. The research that must have gone into this book blows my mind - there's significant detail about bombe, Enigma, and typex machines, along with specific codebreaking strategies and historically accurate war events. If you like historical fiction with a bit of mystery thrown in, or if you were a fan of the ITV series Bletchley Circle, this book is for you.

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A gripping story told through the eyes of several women working at the secret Bletchley Park codebreaking facility during World War II. Osla Kendall is a debutante every one believes is a silly deb. She is fluent in several languages and dating Phillip of Greece. Mab Churt is a hardscrabble woman from the streets with proficient clerical skills. Beth Finch is a cowering woman constantly berated by her mother, but a genius at crosswod puzzles. The all come together to help the British Intelligence crack the Enigma Code. A brilliant, tense novel about the famous Bletchley Park and the near manic need for secrecy. An excellent book.

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Kate Quinn's The Rose Code is outstanding. Quinn presents the story of three women--a Canadian debutante, a Shoreditch social-climber, and a mousy genius--who served together at Bletchley Park and subsequently become involved in the search for a former coworkers selling secrets to the Soviets. The narrative goes back and forth between 1940s Bletchley Park and the days before the royal wedding in 1947. While the characters initially seem more like stock characters than real people, deeper personalities are deftly constructed as they grow and change over the course of the war. While this book includes one of my least favorite tropes--involuntary commitment to a mental hospital--the overall work is highly compelling. Over 600 pages of fascinating, breakneck adventure. Highly recommend.

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Code breaking. Female spies. War. All these lead to another great story by Kate Quinn. The Huntress and the Alice Network have competition from the very same writer! So awesome and very well written

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Thanks to Netgalley and the publisher for an eARC of this book.
There are is much historical fiction centered on Bletchley Park but this one tops them all. Better than th Alice Network, Kate Quinn has outdone herself. Wonderful characters, developed in depth. I hated for it to be over.

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1940. As England prepares to fight the Nazis, three very different women answer the call to mysterious country estate Bletchley Park, where the best minds in Britain train to break German military codes. Debutante Osla is the girl who has everything—beauty, wealth, and the dashing Prince Philip of Greece sending her roses—but she burns to prove herself as more than a society girl, and puts her fluent German to use as a translator of decoded enemy secrets. Imperious self-made Mab, product of east-end London poverty, works the legendary code breaking machines as she conceals old wounds and looks for a socially advantageous husband. Both Osla and Mab are quick to see the potential in local village spinster Beth, whose shyness conceals a brilliant facility with puzzles, and soon Beth spreads her wings as one of the Park’s few female cryptanalysts. But war, loss, and the impossible pressure of secrecy will tear the three apart. 1947. As the royal wedding of Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philip whips post-war Britain into a fever, three friends-turned-enemies are reunited by a mysterious encrypted letter--the key to which lies buried in the long-ago betrayal that destroyed their friendship and left one of them confined to an asylum. A mysterious traitor has emerged from the shadows of their Bletchley Park past, and now Osla, Mab, and Beth must resurrect their old alliance and crack one last code together. But each petal they remove from the rose code brings danger--and their true enemy closer.

I want to thank NetGalley and the publisher to the chance to read this amazing book about real code breakers during Worle War II.

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4.5/5

Three young women from entirely different walks of life.
World War II.
Bletchley Park, 1940.
A traitor in their midst.

Kate Quinn weaves a tale of intrigue, first loves, discovery of self, and most of all, friendship. The WWII codebreakers of Bletchley Park are hard at work. Under an oath of secrecy, these men and women work around the clock decoding war message traffic, and often their work determines victory for Britain. Typists, translators, mathematicians, men and women with various degrees, and those great at solving puzzles are being called in, offered a job, and then sworn to keeping the secrets of the Park.

I found myself extremely attached to the three protagonists in this novel- debutante Osla, with her dazzle and intrigue, whip smart Mab, sharp tongued and tall, and quiet, brilliant Beth, who at the beginning of the story has been beaten down and taught by everyone around her that she would never amount to anything, but soon proves them dead wrong. Throughout the story, the three women grow exponentially and in a way that feels heart wrenchingly, realistically honest.

The story flips back and forth in time, starting in 1940 when the girls are first called in, to 1947 where we find that one of our girls has been betrayed. Quinn leaves a light trail of crumbs, but I found myself surprised regularly when reading, and must admit that I did not catch on to the antagonist until they were revealed. The pacing took a bit of time to catch up with the story, but there was a point, maybe a third through the story, where I genuinely could not put the book down. I often find myself a bit disappointed with endings in stories told so well, and I'm pleased to report that this ending was incredible, well written, thoughtfully structured, and bittersweet but brilliant.

I'm not a frequent reader to historical fiction, but Kate Quinn may have made me a convert!
Thanks to NetGalley and HarperCollins/William Morrow for this digital ARC. I will DEFINITELY be recommending this book to my patrons!

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This is set in WWII and the story focuses on three women - Osla, Mab, and Beth, who meet at Bletchley Park. The book switches between present and past and gives you insight in to each of the three characters. I loved that the history was intertwined between love, friendship, loss, anger and so much more within this story.

Kate Quinn is a genius at creating a beautiful setting and story, with intense and complex characters. She is able to bring out what the characters must have felt when doing such intense mental work, which makes the book that much more relatable and magical.

I thoroughly enjoyed the history and story of this one. The only reason I couldn't give it a full 5 stars is there were some portions that were dragged a bit longer than necessary.

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Run, do not walk to read this book. Quinn weaves a believable tale of women in WW2 England trying to break out of stereotypical society roles for the greater good. Realizing they will be forever changed after the war, but have to revert back to pre war stereotypical roles that never fit in the first place. The main characters of Mab, Osla, and Beth are well- written and you are rooting for all of them and their colleagues. Quinn also throws these characters with some real life personalities. The result is a believable, engaging story that makes you want to read the too early fictional memoir at the end.

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This story is crafted from history at Bletchley Park, where women toiled in huge numbers surpassing their male counterparts cracking Nazi Germany and Fascist Italian code during World War II maintaining secrecy and turning the tide of the war. The novel was well written, as Quinn’s novels always are and gave an intriguing read. Quinn deftly leaves hints that we take little notice of and later realize the significance of. This type of storytelling is what separates bland novels about the period from those that grab our interest and inform us about people we knew nothing about. The western world has survived because of people like the women brought to life in The Rose.

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This book was just okay for me. I loved Kate Quinn's The Huntress book and so I figured I would equally love this one, but it feel flat for me. I think the story line was good and the idea was great, but it was dragging too much for me. I found myself wanting to skip through parts in the middle to get to the good stuff. It could have just been my reading mood, but it wasn't awesome for me. Thank you for giving me this book to review for free. I am giving it four stars because I love this author, and I want people to still read it with hopes that it was just an off reading for me. Also, the beginning and the end were exciting and I did love the three girls and the code breaking within the WWII themes.

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Quinn writes perfectly, the imperfect heroine. Patriots driven to serve and brilliant women unapologetic in their passions, this title celebrates intellect and integrity with a story line that knows how to keep a secret.

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The Bletchley Park codebreakers have received a lot of attention recently and this novel of three very different women recruited because of three different skill sets plus the reader in the center of the action from the start of the war to its aftermath when they unite to uncover a traitor in their midst.

Debutante Osla with her German language skills, east ender Mab who is using her secretarial skills to move up in the world, and dreamer Beth who can complete a crossword in five minutes are billet-mates and unlikely friends until betrayal turns them into implacable enemies who must unite to uncover the double whammy who threatens Beth's life.

The story is told in two timelines, wartime at the Park and the ten days leading up to the royal wedding in 1947 when the three reunite to prove the identity of the person who betrayed all three and caused Beth's committal to an asylum. The early timeline weaves many historical events and people into the plot, including a young and dashing Prince Philip, and gives the reader a real understanding of life at the Park and the buildup to the finale is very effective but I found the ending rushed and flat. Too many coincidences were used to create happy endings for everyone, except the traitor of course.

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Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! No spoilers. Beyond amazing I enjoyed this book so very much. The characters and storyline were fantastic. The ending I did not see coming Could not put down nor did I want to. Truly Amazing and appreciated the whole story. This is going to be a must read for many many readers. Maybe even a book club pick.

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