The Gingerbread Man

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For other uses of the word, see Gingerbread Man (disambiguation).

The Gingerbread Man is an English fairy tale about a gingerbread man cookie that comes to life. It exists in several variants, in which the piece of food is not always the same. Joseph Jacobs collected two variants; in English Fairy Tales, it is a Johnny Cake, and in More English Fairy Tales, a Scottish variant has a wee bannock.

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[edit] Synopsis

In the story, an elderly couple live in a cabin. The wife one day decides to bake a cookie. She takes the gingerbread dough and turns it into the shape of a man and bakes it. She then decorates it to give him eyes, shirt buttons, a mouth and other accessories.

When he was done cooking, the couple go to eat him. He comes to life and runs away, yelling "Don't eat me." The couple try to stop him but he jumps out the window yelling "Run, run, run as fast you can! You can't catch me, I'm The Gingerbread Man!" They run after him.

He runs into the woods where he meets a pig, who talks to him, wanting to eat him. The Gingerbread Man runs from the pig yelling "Run, run, run as fast you can! You can't catch me, I'm The Gingerbread Man!"

He is chased by the pig until he runs into a cow, who also wants to eat him. He once again yells his quote and keeps running. He meets a horse, who also wants to eat him. But he yells again and keeps running.

With the couple, the pig, cow, and horse all chasing him, he stays ahead of them all until he comes to a river. He can't cross it as it would make him soggy and fall apart. With the hungry animals chasing him he has to figure out a way across the river. He meets a fox there who offers to help them. The fox tells him to get on his back and the fox then swims through the river. The fox tells him that the water is getting deeper and he'll have to get up onto his head. The fox continues to do this until The Gingerbread Man is on his nose. He then tosses The Gingerbread Man into the air and catches him in his mouth eating him.

[edit] Variants

The Johnny Cake, in the Jacobs version, rolls rather than runs, and the fox tricks it by pretending to be deaf and unable to hear its taunting verse.

[edit] Adaptations

Jasper Fforde's The Fourth Bear, a noir/nursery rhyme cross-genre novel, includes the Gingerbread Man as a serial killer.

The Stinky Cheese Man in Jon Scieszka and Lane Smith's book of the same name is an adaptation where the Gingerbread Man is replaced by a man made of Stinky Cheese that no one chases.

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