The Gingerbread Man

""You can't catch me, I'm the Gingerbread Man!""

"The Gingerbread Man" (or "Gingerbread Boy") is the anthropomorphic protagonist of the Fairy Tale of the same name. The Gingerbread Boy makes his first print appearance in the May 1875 issue of St. Nicholas Magazine.

In the original tale, a childless old woman bakes a gingerbread boy who runs away upon creation. The woman and her husband give chase but fail to catch him. The gingerbread boy then outruns several farm workers and farm animals while taunting them with the phrase: "I've run away from a little old woman,

A little old man,

And I can run away from you, I can!"

The tale ends when a crafty fox tricks the Gingerbread Boy and eats him.

The story and character make several appearances in popular culture such as Shrek and its sequels, the novella The Gingerbread Girl by Stephen King, or Skepta's 2009 Album Microphone Champion with the track "The Gingerbread man". He's also recast as a mass murdering villain in Jasper Fforde's The Fourth Bear.

This story provides examples of:

 * Animate Inanimate Object
 * Cunning Like a Fox
 * Fragile Speedster: The little cookie can outrun grown humans, but is eventually killed with a single bite from a fox.
 * I Taste Delicious
 * Law of Inverse Fertility: In some versions, the old woman deliberately created the Gingerbread Man because she couldn't have real children. Which probably makes her the fairy-tale equivalent of a Motherly Mad Scientist...
 * Let's Meet the Meat
 * Super Speed
 * Wonder Child