Worlds where the supernatural has gone public — and society is still figuring out the paperwork, the civil rights legislation, and whether werewolves can join the K-9 unit.
Post-revelation urban fantasy asks a question that feels increasingly relevant: what happens the day after the world learns it was wrong about what's real? Not the dramatic moment of revelation, but the years that follow — the legislation, the integration, the backlash, the absurdity of bureaucracies trying to accommodate things they have no framework for.
These books treat the supernatural as a social fact rather than a secret, which opens up kinds of storytelling — political, comedic, procedural — that hidden-world urban fantasy can't access. The monsters have civil rights attorneys now. The paperwork is worse than the monsters.
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