Character Biography
- In the first book Inkheart, Meggie learns that her father can bring stories to life and is being chased by a man called Capricorn for this. She gets captured by Capricorn and Mo comes to save her. Together with her great-aunt Elinor, Dustfinger - a fire-eater, Farid - a boy called from the book Arabian Nights, Fenoglio - the writer of Inkheart and a horned marten named Gwin, Meggie and Mo try to destroy Capricorn and his evil army. She learns that she too has inherited her father's gift, and is forced to read for Capricorn, but Mo helps her defeat him.
- In Inkspell, Meggie and Farid jump into the book and try to save Mo from an execution. Meggie has a romantic relationship with Farid.
- In Inkdeath, Meggie follows the strolling players under the leadership of the Black Prince. The romantic relationship with Farid is shattered as Meggie feels betrayed by his inability to come see her due to his service to Orpheus and when he ignores her due to Dustfinger's return. Meggie accompanies the Bluejay into Ombra Castle, begins a new relationship with a boy named Doria who she later falls in love with, and helps the strolling players to fend off an attack by the Milksop. She later marries Doria, and forgets all about Farid, who no longer pays attention to Meggie but Dustfinger. Farid, at the end of the book, before leaving to be a fire-dancer, asks Meggie to come with him on the adventures and they can re-create their romantic relationship. She rejects him and her and Doria start dating and then get married later.
- Meggie's father is Mortimer Folchart and he has the ability to read characters out of books, just like the power Meggie found of herself. Mo (also called Bluejay or Silvertongue) read his wife into Inkheart and was searching for a long time to finally find a copy to read Resa (his wife) out of it again. This was when Inkheart took off and the mysteries and the story unfolded of this magical land.
Read more about this topic: Meggie Folchart
Famous quotes containing the words character and/or biography:
“As a natural process, of the same character as the development of a tree from its seed, or of a fowl from its egg, evolution excludes creation and all other kinds of supernatural intervention.”
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