Steph Markowitz
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"Evelyn is the ultimate flawless protagonist, eager to do whatever the plot requires. The plot says it’s time to have sex? She wants to have sex! It’s time to have a baby? She wants to have a baby!
How lucky that she is just compassionate enough to be likable but just detached enough to act without hesitation or introspection. It’s painfully obvious at every turn that her story has already been written for her." — Jul 06, 2025 06:06AM
"Evelyn is the ultimate flawless protagonist, eager to do whatever the plot requires. The plot says it’s time to have sex? She wants to have sex! It’s time to have a baby? She wants to have a baby!
How lucky that she is just compassionate enough to be likable but just detached enough to act without hesitation or introspection. It’s painfully obvious at every turn that her story has already been written for her." — Jul 06, 2025 06:06AM


“Deer are the sad sacks of American wildlife, so beautiful, so defenseless, so numerous, so dim. Their chief predator is cars. They never seem to get it, about cars or anything else; or maybe they do, but they don’t have a good way to transmit what they learn to their kids, if they happen to get lucky and live past their youth. It’s important always to remember that even if they’re as common as rats, some kind of mammal weed, they are still beautiful wild animals, getting by on their own in a dangerous world. I always say hi when I see them, and try to remember to get the same thrill I would if I were to see someone unusual, like a wolverine. It’s hard, but it’s a habit you can build. Love your deer! Just fence your veggie garden really well.”
― The Ministry for the Future
― The Ministry for the Future

“Ansel was no evil genius. He did not even seem particularly smart. From across the table, the brilliant psychopath she’d hounded all these years looked to Saffy like an unremarkable man, aging and apathetic, bloated and dull. Some men, Saffy knew, killed from a place of anger. Others killed from humiliation, or hatred, or depraved sexual need. Ansel was not rare or mystifying. He was the least nuanced of them all, a murky combination of all the above. A small and boring man who killed because he felt like it.”
― Notes on an Execution
― Notes on an Execution

“I think what we fear most about finding a mind equal to our own, but of another species, is that they will truly see us—and find us lacking, and turn away from us in disgust. That contact with another mind will puncture our species’ self-satisfied feeling of worth. We will have to confront, finally, what we truly are, and the damage we have done to our home. But that confrontation, perhaps, is the only thing that will save us. The only thing that will allow us to look our short-sightedness, our brutality, and our stupidity in the face, and change.”
― The Mountain in the Sea
― The Mountain in the Sea

“Here’s the true economy, these people said: since the Earth’s biosphere was the only one available to humanity, and its healthy function absolutely necessary to humanity’s existence, its worth to people was a kind of existential infinity. Gauging the price of saving the biosphere’s functions against the cost of losing them would therefore always be impossible. Macroeconomics had thus long ago entered a zone of confusion, either early in the century or perhaps from the moment of its birth, and now was revealed for the pseudoscience it had always been.”
― The Ministry for the Future
― The Ministry for the Future

“The great and terrible thing about humankind is simply this: we will always do what we are capable of.”
― The Mountain in the Sea
― The Mountain in the Sea
Steph’s 2024 Year in Books
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