Diferencia entre revisiones de «Hammond»

No hay cambio en el tamaño ,  hace 4 años
m
minor edit
m (minor edit)
 
== Relationships ==
=== MadraMardra ===
Madra[[Mardra]] is Ham’s wife who he left behind until the death of the Lord Ruler, to protect her from his job. She is a seamstress who lives outside the city and tells people her husband works in the Garrison. He missed her as he only sees her a couple of months a year. {{book ref|mb1|24}} Together they have two children. {{book ref|mb2|42}}
=== Kelsier ===
Ham is very loyal to Kelsier, but is also worried about him and his ego. He along with Dox and Breeze try to restrain him when he goes overboard. {{book ref|mb1|24}}. Kelsier on the other hand, considers Ham as prone to think about things that no sane man would consider. Still, he listened and the debate on if Skaa were made inferior was an idea Kelsier never forgot. {{book ref|mb1|21}}
=== Breeze ===
Ham and Breeze are good friends as well as colleagues. The warrior philosopher is a foil for Breeze. Since Breeze tends to be arrogant, long-winded, and manipulative, and BreezeHam is humble, long-winded, and kindly they tend to disagree a lot and pick on each other.{{book ref|mb1|annotations 4}}
=== Vin ===
Vin likes Ham, and he in return. He trains her on burning pewter and sparing. {{book ref|mb2|6}} He helps taking care of her the times she arrives back injured from a mission. {{book ref|mb1|31}} During the time when Vin was being influenced by Zane, Ham did have suspicion on her truthfulness and thought she might be at some point a liability. {{book ref|mb2|44}}
}}
{{quote
| We may be friends, but when it comes to fighting, none of us would hesitate to kill the others.”
| Ham to Vin on the Garrison {{book ref|mb1|24}}
}}
 
== Trivia ==
I really wish I'd made Ham a woman, for example. I think the character would have gone interesting places--and would have done good things for the lore of the world if women Thugs were heavily recruited to be soldiers. {{bookwob ref|wob| 4929}}
 
He's a protector, not a conqueror. Taking a city for its own good "(Fadrex City)" would have destroyed him, as it violates his basic life principles. He should have turned around as he did, and karma—or, well, the author—rewards him for it.{{book ref|mb3| annotations 65}}
918

ediciones