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Today's Edition · Sunday, June 14, 2026

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The Cover Story

The City We Became

N. K. Jemisin

N.K. Jemisin's The City We Became builds an urban fantasy on a wild premise: when a city grows big and complex enough, it gets born as a living thing with human avatars to defend it. New York gets six of them, one per borough, and something ancient and hostile is bent on stopping that birth.

From the review

The conceit here is the whole show, and it's a good one. Cities don't just have character; in Jemisin's framework they accumulate enough lived human density to wake up, choosing people to embody them. New York is so vast and contradictory that it can't be one avatar. It needs a primary plus five borough champions, each tuned to the history, rhythm, and grievances of their patch. The magic isn't a system you study. It's something the characters feel through their feet on the pavement, through music, through graffiti that seems to want to be touched. That sensory rooting is what makes the wonder land. When a young man steps onto a platform and suddenly knows the city the way you know your own pulse, or when Brooklyn hears her borough as a beat under her heels, the abstraction turns physical and immediate.

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