Comparison Of John Steinbeck's Of Mice And Men

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In the story “Of Mice and Men” by John Steinbeck he illustrates the fight between man versus man. John Steinbeck tells the story of George Milton and Lennie Small, two displaced migrant ranch workers, who move from place to place in California in search of new job opportunities during the Great Depression in the United States. George had Lennie think about the good times on life; about the farm, “livin off the fada of the land” with George and Candy. How Lennie would tend to the rabbits and feed them alfalfa from the field they owned. I believe that George needed to kill Lennie to have closure in the end. During this time travelling with someone else was a strange thing to do but George did not find it strange at all Slim looked through …show more content…

When they're being chased by dogs and horses and man he still hit with Lenny and keep them safe. even when George had to run away and lose his job due to a stick of Lenny hero sick by Lenny. When they're being chased by dogs and horses and men he still hit with Lenny and keep them safe. If he deeply cared about Lennie but it wasn't showed through words it was shown through by actions. George is always minute Lennie for never being able to keep them a job because their repair they were always together. They were back George is always minute Lenny for never being able to keep them a job because they were always together, they were a package deal. Lenny was a strong man who could do heavy lifting him in Georgia is the brains of the operation handling the money and smarts of the deal. George and Lennie string was it an escape reality for them on the run. they could stop and think about the good they wanted to happen, even after all the wrong that happened to them they still have one goal to be on the farm and own a piece of land. It meant the world to them that they could stop and think about the good they wanted to happen, even after all the wrong that happened to them they still have one goal to be on the farm. It meant the world to Lennie that he could feed and tend to the rabbits, he would feed him alfalfa that they grew in the land they had. And he could pet the rabbits without