Stephen Chambers is the author several novels, including Jane and the Raven King. He is a research analyst and writer with Monitor Horizons, and has a Ph.D. in history from Brown University.
Stephen Chambers brings a bright searchlight to a dark corner of history: the illegal slave trade that was so central to the rise of American capitalism. The book is especially valuable in a historical moment when the legacy of race and slavery haunts American politics. - Marcus Rediker, author of The Amistad Rebellion: An Atlantic Odyssey of Slavery and Freedom With deep research and narrative style, Stephen Chambers challenges a significant misunderstanding about the so-called Era of Good Feelings. As he shows, the apparent 'end' of the slave trade in 1808 did little to stem the growth of slavery in the United States. Through huge investment in Cuba, American interests, including northern interests, deepened their dependence upon slavery and the slave trade, at exactly the moment it was supposed to be in decline. No God But Gain is an important corrective to the historical record. - Ted Widmer, author of Brown: The History of an Idea Stephen Chambers' engagingly written new book will grab readers with its narratives from the lives of New Englanders who traveled to Cuba to participate more directly in the exploitation of the half million enslaved Africans brought to the island after the U.S. supposedly banned participation in the Atlantic slave trade and played a crucial role in an era of explosive American economic growth. - Edward E. Baptist, author of The Half Has Never Been Told: Slavery and the Making of American Capitalism Attentive to intrigue, irony, and violence, this is a bold account that moves from Boston counting houses to Havana consular offices to the halls of Congress, tracing the global circulation of capital, commodities, and slaves that fueled the development of American empire in the early Republic. No God But Gain is full of provocative arguments-not least that liberal trade policy went hand-in-hand with human bondage, and that the Monroe Doctrine was designed to protect the illegal slave trade. - Amy Stanley, author of From Bondage to Contract: Wage Labor, Marriage, and the Market in the Age of Slave Emancipation Stephen Chambers' vivid reconstruction of the active involvement of northern investors, merchants, financiers, speculators, and politicians in the expansion of the Cuban slave economy and the international slave trade recasts the history of the early American Republic. It opens new perspectives for interpreting United States history within broader currents of Atlantic history. - Dale Tomich, author of Through the Prism of Slavery: Labor, Capital, and World Economy Chambers' book is a compelling look at American history prior to the Civil War. - Louisville Courier-Journal