Ad placeholder

Morgan

From bg3.wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Morgan is a lightfoot halfling in Baldur's Gate during Act Three.
Nah, the blood and sex were the best bits. Of any book, really.
Morgan, discussing the group's most recent book

Involvement[edit | edit source]

Act Three[edit | edit source]

Morgan can be encountered in Bloomridge Park in the Lower City discussing books with Caerdwyn Caerdwyn and Kepli Kepli during their book club. She is especially fond of the character Dusk.

Idle banter[edit | edit source]

Morgan, Caerdwyn, and Kepli discuss Dusk's Dark Desires at book club:

  • Kepli
    So - Book Brigade. What did we think of Dusk's Dark Desires?
    • Caerdwyn
      A thrilling read. Gave me goosepimples.
      • Morgan
        Goosepimples are right - bits of the book were downright naughty.
        • Kepli
          Morgan, please. We're in public, let's keep away from the book's racier parts.
          • Morgan
            Racy? More like juicy. A very juicy read.
            • Caerdwyn
              Yeah, the book was a lot more... lewd than its prequels.
              • Kepli
                Please focus, we're the Book Brigade, not a smut symposium!
  • Kepli
    Now, I personally loved the book's setting. Twisty corridors, flickering candlelight - oh, it's just such compelling reading.
    • Morgan
      Nah, the blood and sex were the best bits. Of any book, really.
      • Caerdwyn
        No, I'm with Kepli. The novel's sense of intrigue was its finest quality.
        • Morgan
          Don't get me wrong - the book intrigued me. In all the right ways.
  • Caerdwyn
    So, Kepli - who was your favourite character in the book?
    • Kepli
      I really liked what the author did with Bedford.
      • Caerdwyn
        I agree. Who'd have thought a were-cow could be written so beautifully?
        • Morgan
          You're fools, obviously Dusk was the story's best character.
          • Kepli
            The novel's protagonist is such a basic choice, Morgan. Listen, I know what I like - and the book delivered it in spades.

Related literature[edit | edit source]