Books by Stephen Trombley
VISIONARIES: Fifty Thinkers Who Shaped the Modern World

At every turn, we find thinkers of the period harking back to their predecessors, laying the groundwork for those would follow. It is the presentation of these fascinating interconnections, in the context of historical and social movements, that makes Visionaries a fresh and original take on the history of western thought.
Forthcoming in April 2012 from Atlantic Books
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The Norton Dictionary of Modern Thought (ed. With Alan Bullock)

This single volume reference provides encyclopedic coverage of the key ideas which
have shaped modern thought. More discursive than an ordinary dictionary, more compact
than an encyclopedia, and more selective than either, it covers the whole range of modern thought from the latest developments in astrophysics to recent trends in the arts.
“How did one exist without this splendid book?” The Economist
“This is volume for which many of us are on many occasions going to be truly thankful.” Financial Times
“For more than 20 years this book has been a bible for those struggling to remember the meaning of everything from Marxism to the Mormons.” The Guardian
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what procedures are followed, what precautions are taken. When the courts impose a
death sentence the condemned enters a shadowy and secret world that most people are
happy to ignore. Author Stephen Trombley immersed himself in this world and was
granted unprecedented access to the community of the condemned and their executioners. What emerges is a picture of men doing their jobs with a degree of awareness and purpose
that is chilling. Dispassionate, revelatory, and thoroughly gripping, The Execution Protocol is
a weird journey inside an America that few people ever see.
“It leaves the reader feeling uncomfortable, which is what a good book should do”. The
New York Times
“A grim, if compelling, journey into the world of America's legal death industry. Mr Trombley claims his purpose is to present the facts he observes in a detached manner, without passing judgment. What he produces, however, amounts to a forceful case against capital punishment.” The Economist
“Trombley's book is an account of the sanitisation of killing….It is a considerable tribute to his style that the facts
seem to burst through the prose, leaving no trace of the author in my mind.” The Independent (London)
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controlling people on the margins of society – not only criminals and the insane, but ordinary human beings, women in particular. Charting the rise of the eugenics movement in England, with its philosophy of encouraging the fit to breed while discouraging the ‘unfit’ through sterilization, Dr. Trombley documents the compulsory sterilization laws passed by American states, upon which the Nazi sterilization bill of 1933 was based. He also uncovers surprising support for sterilization from the Fabians in Britain and Progressives in the US, and traces sterilization as a social policy in the United States through the late twentieth century.
“thoroughly researched and well written…traces an inescapable road to ruin that begins with an initial thought and ends in outright genocide.” New Statesman
“The standard text on the subject.” Paul A. Lombardo
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SIR FREDERICK TREVES: The Extraordinary Edwardian

surgeons of his time and became a best-selling author of travel books and autobiography. Treves was a pioneer of surgery, helping to transform it from a barbaric craft to a modern science. Through his service to three monarchs, he participated in the dazzling life of the
court. As a man of adventure he volunteered his surgical skills during the Boer War, and returned to a controversy in which he spearheaded the reform of the ineffectual Royal Army Medical Corps. He helped to found the British Red Cross Society and worked for it during
WWI. As a travel writer, Treves explored remote corners of the world long before tourism.
“Stephen Trombley has served his subject well, producing a highly readable and consistently entertaining life which shows Treves ‘warts and everything’.” British Medical Journal
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Modern British Architecture since 1945 (ed. with Peter Murray)

in the development of twentieth-century architecture, because they are fine examples of their type, or because they are the buildings everyone feels they must see. Almost 400 buildings
are described and illustrated in this guide, highlighting the wealth of good architecture since
the War, and, particularly, the quality of building in the recent past.
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‘ALL THAT SUMMER SHE WAS MAD’: Virginia Woolf, Female Victim of Male Medicine

“A very valuable and also a very readable book.” Quentin Bell in The Observer
“Trombley trenchantly spurns the sub-romantic bilge that it takes the savage god of madness
to fire creative genius.” Roy Porter, New Society
“Well-documented. Essential for all Virginia Woolf admirers.” The Bookseller