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http://woldnewtonresource.wikia.com/wiki/Andrew_Bond
http://woldnewtonresource.wikia.com/wiki/Monique_Delacroix
I see where you're coming from, but at the same rate, I feel that if I knew more about Bond and his past I would grow a bigger connection to him.
The young Bond books are canon as it turns out and what's especially good is that, it doesn't crap on what Fleming wrote. in fact, I consider Higson's wok on young Bond to be superior to all the other Bond writers bar Fleming of course.
I've only read Silverfin but what I remember is that
True. Being able to connect to a character especially on an emotional level can bring you closer to them and help understand their persona and character traits.
With Bond part of his allure historically for me is he is somewhat a closed book with layers of buried emotions relating to his experiences and past, which are simmering under the surface. I am enjoying the glimpses we are being shown with Craig's Bond.
Right you are.
They also died in a rock climbing accident when he was 7 (or was that 11), although Deaver suggests it was murder (ala The Living Daylights PTS)
Obviously not fact, but I buy it.
I believe it was a special division in MI6.
Really? That is one more reason for my rejection to read continuation novels, and also another one of why I love SF, they didn't change the history of Bond's parents and their death.
I completely agree with you on Skyfall. It was brilliantly handled. I also like that he wasn't all sentimental about the house. He was ready to blow it to bits, and everything.
Yeah, I though he would care, but I guess not. I think Craig's Bond is one who tries his hardest to keep as little as possible about him on record as he can manage. Maybe having parents that died young in his life made him so protective and guarded? A great connection to the way he acts in CR, and this film shows quite clearly why he may act in such a way. Bond acts reckless in CR maybe due to the fact that he had his childhood robbed from him and he never really got it back. As he began he acted like a kid when he is a rookie in MI6. Now with Skyfall we are seeing more and more of the professional Bond we know and love.
Never! He did not.
I think Fleming had too much aversion towards romanticism that he couldn't portray espionage as a family tradition...
Pearson also claimed that Bond was not born in Switzerland as other novelists' said - instead implying that he was born in Germany.
As far as I can remember, someone told me that Pearson also implied that Monique Delacroix Bond and Andrew Bond's relationship was very rocky - she was having an affair and it was heavily suggested that their accident in the Alps was not so; Andrew Bond found out about the affair, killed Monique and then himself.
Very sensational claims.
I agree to a point, but Fleming also tends to make out that Bond is English, it's not until YOLT that he brings in his Scottish connection ( as a supposed "thank you" to Connery ...or Flemings own heriatge). Of course it is quite posible that 'M' got it wrong in his obituary, even though Fleming wrote it 'M' may not have all the facts.
As much as I adore Fleming's books he is the one that confuses the issue over Bonds past. That piece in YOLT opens a whole new can of worms, other authors/sceen writers try their best to tie up loose ends. I can see where Pearson is coming from, Fleming is Bond so he has an older brother. Higson does superb job in his novels to get things back o track, so to speak.
In the world of Bond there are alwys lots of questions that never have answers....except Andrew Bond was representitive the Vickers armaments firm.
Sometimes it wasn't just his past either, he often changed the position of his physical features (his scar on his cheek being the prime example). Fleming just couldn't make up his mind sometimes.
Really? Examples of where he does this (especially relating to the scar)?
My apologies - not the scar on his cheek, but the one on his hand given to him by SMERSH in the CR novel. Yes as far as I can remember, and I may be mis-remembering, the scar tends to fluctuate between the back of his his left and right hands between novels. OHMSS mentions it to be on the right while MR places it on the left, something along those lines. I'll be re-reading them all from CR to the end after Christmas, so I'll see if I'm right or just plain crazy after that!
didnt casino royale establish bond was an orphan on the scene between vesper and james on the train ?