Fables 156.cbr Direct
In #156, we see the continued evolution of and Snow White . After decades of being the "power couple" of Fabletown, they are now navigating a world where their children are adults with their own agency. This issue leans heavily into the parental anxiety that has defined this revival: can you ever truly protect your family when the "Happily Ever After" was just a pause, not an end? 2. Peter Pan: The Subverted Hero
The most striking element of this current run is the reimagining of . Fables has always excelled at taking beloved folklore and twisting it—turning the "Boy Who Wouldn't Grow Up" into a terrifying, predatory figure is perhaps one of Willingham's darkest turns. Fables 156.cbr
The titular "Black Forest" isn't just a place; it’s a manifestation of the Fables' collective past. In this issue, the atmospheric art by Mark Buckingham really shines. The use of dense, cross-hatched shadows reinforces the idea that the Fables are no longer in the clean, modern confines of New York City, but are being pulled back into the primal, "Once Upon a Time" logic that they spent centuries trying to escape. 4. The Narrative Pivot In #156, we see the continued evolution of and Snow White
When Fables ended in 2015, fans thought the book was closed. But with the 20-issue revival starting at #151, the stakes shifted from the grand, multiversal wars of the past to something more intimate and ancient. Issue #156 is a pivotal "mid-arc" moment where the new status quo—and the new threats—finally start to solidify. 1. The Burden of Legacy (Bigby & Snow) The titular "Black Forest" isn't just a place;
"Fables #156" marks a major milestone in Bill Willingham’s long-running comic series, serving as the sixth chapter of the arc which revived the series after its initial 150-issue run.