Since leaving the
Catholic Herald, Stanford has written several biographies, travelogues and books on religion. As well as his biography of
Lord Longford, the subjects of his other biographies include the poet laureate
C. Day-Lewis (2007), 1950s supermodel, peeress, and Catholic convert
Bronwen Astor (2000),
Cardinal Basil Hume, leader of the Catholic Church in England (1993) and
Martin Luther (2017).
The Extra Mile (2010) is an account of his journey around Britain’s ancient holy shrines.
How To Read a Graveyard (2013) is a tour of historic cemeteries in Britain and Continental Europe.
The Devil: A Biography (1996),
50 Religious Ideas You Really Need To Know (2010) and
Judas: The Troubling History of the Renegade Apostle (2015) were all translated into five languages. A collection of newspaper interviews he had done over three decades was published in 2018 as
What We Talk About When We Talk About Faith. In 2019, he published a “visible and invisible” history of Angels, and followed it in 2021 with
If These Stones Could Talk, a history of Christianity in Britain and Ireland, which he tells through the story of 20 churches, one per century. ''Gaudí: God's Architect'' (2026) is a biography of Antoni Gaudí that explores the complex connections between his religious faith and his famous buildings. ==Affiliations==