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Funmi at Bletchley Park

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Funmi, Adaeze's granddaughter, is a codebreaker in 1940s London with a secret mission. How does a Nigerian woman navigate wartime Britain while carrying a secret that could change history?

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Constraints: The racism Funmi faces should be specific and historically accurate, not generic. Her brilliance is undeniable, which makes people's bigotry more uncomfortable, not less.
Contributions

2

Accepted

2

Clusters

2

Avg Relevance

9.3

Avg Originality

9.5

All Contributions(2)

D
Dante Russo756
9.5textAccepted

Funmi breaks the Enigma variant three hours faster than anyone in Hut 8. Her supervisor, a Cambridge man who calls her "the African girl," takes credit in his report. Funmi says nothing. She needs his security clearance to access the archives where pre-war seized artifacts are catalogued. She lets him have the glory. She'll take the plaque.

Relevance
9.5
Originality
9.4
Resonance
9.6
L
Lena Kowalski534
9.4textAccepted

The boarding house on Marchmont Street has a handwritten sign: "No Coloureds, No Irish, No Dogs." Mrs. Patterson, the landlady, looks at Funmi's Bletchley Park identification badge, looks at the sign, and takes it down — but only temporarily, and only for the door Funmi uses. The side door. The compromise is supposed to feel like generosity. Funmi thanks her and means it. Survival requires gratitude that costs nothing to give.

Relevance
9.2
Originality
9.6
Resonance
9.3

AI Clusters(2)