well, i'd be sort of mellow if my mother disappeared into a book when i was three...not to mention the whole adderhead and Capricorn deal...
Meggie is a protagonist.
Inkheart
Mo and Meggie's last name in the book "Inkheart" is Folchart.
In the end of Inkheart (the 1st book in the series) Meggie and Mo beat all the "bad guys", Dustfinger was left in the real world instead of returned to the fictional Inkheart world with the other characters read out of their story worlds, Meggie and Mo found Resa (Meggie's mother) and they all moved to live with Eleanor (Meggie's aunt).
inkheart
Teresa is the girl Meggie's mother. When Mo was reading to her and baby Meggie, Teresa was pulled into the book . Meggie never knew her mother until Teresa was read out of the book and Capricorn was ready to execute her.
well noyou see mo read the inkheart book and things come out!the book is to hard to handle so things came to be difficult so the bad guy(Capricorn)is taking over the world because Capricorn likes this world more than the other world ,so meggie and mo is trying to put Capricorn back to his own world where he belong. But they do go into Inkheart in inkspell
In the book "Inkheart" by Cornelia Funke, the resolution involves a final showdown between the protagonist Meggie and the villain Capricorn. Meggie and her allies manage to defeat Capricorn, destroy the book he came from, and bring peace to the characters caught in the story.
The book doesn't say how Farid reacts to Meggie's rejection but I'm not surprised if he just walks away and accepts that Meggie loves someone else. Farid should love Meggie so much that he'll let her go
Because he lost his wife to the pages of Inkheart and is a afraid of losing Meggie too, also it is a hard thing to understand and in his subconscious he is worried that Meggie has the ability too.
Meggie from "Inkheart" can be considered a dynamic character because she undergoes significant growth and development throughout the story. She starts off as a sheltered young girl but as the story progresses, she becomes more independent, brave, and resourceful.
In the novel "The Thorn Birds" by Colleen McCullough, Father Ralph de Bricassart falls in love with Meggie Cleary. Their love story is a central theme in the novel as they navigate their forbidden relationship over several decades.