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Mr. Mole is a loyal friend to Mr. Toad from "Wind in the Willows".
Obscure figure of the early Church.
The character from the nursery rhyme "Hey Diddle Diddle" who ran away with the Dish. In Fables, the Spoon is a female.
Assistant to Hansel in Fables.
Frau Totenkinder's first love.
Racoon who appears in several issues of Fables at the Farm.
The character from the nursery rhyme "Hey Diddle Diddle" who ran away with the Spoon In Fables, the Dish is a male.
One of Geppetto's assistants back in the Homelands.
Jack Frost's sidekick. A creation (and former servant) of the Adversary. Frau Totenkinder also used MacDuff's eyes to spy on him, now with Geppetto's departure. It is possible Frau could see MacDuff's adventures with Jack Frost.
Classic thief from Arabian Nights.
The protagonist of Alexandre Dumas novel The Count of Monte Cristo.
Secretary for Rose Red on the farm. He has recently created a new religion centered around Boy Blue.
Pitcher for the Gobtown Crushers. On trial for murder.
From the nursery rhyme.
Originally created by Rudyard Kipling for his Jungle Book stories, Shere Khan is a powerful tiger who hates humans.
From the Jungle Book stories by Rudyard Kipling.
A puppet created by the Adversary to pose as the conqueror of the Homelands.
Peter Cottontail from the story of Old Mother West Wind. Not to be confused with Beatrix Potter's Peter Rabbit.
Character from a Grimm Brothers fairy tale.
The Snow Queen is a character from a classic fairy tale by Hans Christian Andersen.
Boo "shared" a bed with Goldilocks. While the first cub Boo Bear lives in Haven, Mamma Bear had a new cub whom they also named Boo after his deceased brother at the Farm.
One of the Three Little Pigs in Fabletown. Cousin to Dun and Colin.
Dun is one of the Three Little Pigs. He was one of the leaders in the revolt against the humans in Fabletown up in the Farm.
Gepetto is a poor wood carver who is Pinocchio's "father".
He is a trickster who succeeds by his speed and wits rather than by brawn.
Frankenstein's monster is a fictional character that first appeared in Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, or The Modern Prometheus.
Old King Cole, the "merry old soul" is the protagonist of a nursery rhyme.
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