The stranger is Dustfinger.
inkheart is the name of 1 of the books and the movie ........ because in the movie and book there is a book that Maggie and mo are trying to protect and the title of that book that mo is trying to keep sectret is inkheart... mo doesn't tell Maggie until she finds out
Mo and Meggie's last name in the book "Inkheart" is Folchart.
Mortimer, also known as Mo, is in his mid-thirties in "Inkheart."
Mo is played by Brendan Fraser.
The main antagonist is Capricorn, the main "villain" that Mo read out of the fictional Inkheart novel; as well as his henchmen Basta, Flatnose and many others. Thanks to the simplistic style of the fictional Inkheart, the "bad guys" in Inkheart all wore black clothing.
Capricorn is the dude in the story that wants the book from mo, then Mo and Meggie go over Elinor's house and get the book (if you are asking who is Elinor she is Mo's wifes aunt that has a house full of books
Mo is the main character. He is a bookbinder and is the father of Maggie. Mo accidently read his wife into the book Inkheart and Dustfinger was the one who replaced her. Mo is also reffered to as Silvertounge. this is because of the fact sometimes when he reads, characters from the books are taken from that world and placed in to ours and vice versa.
No, Mo did. I recommend Wikipedia if you want a details.
Meggie lives with her father, Mo, until the events in Inkheart take her first to her Aunt Elinor's, then to Capricorn's village and eventually she, Mo and her mother Resa all return with Elinor to live in the castle by the lake.
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
Meggie called her father Mo
The reader in "Inkheart" is called Fenoglio. He is a character in the book who is the author of the story within the story. His words have the power to bring characters out of the book.