Writing devices are used perfectly throughout the whole book, including foreshadow of Curley’s wife’s and Lennie’s final death, symbolization that stands for social issues back to 1930’s, and comparison of the weak and the strong. First, foreshadow in this book is mainly used as clues of both Lennie’s and Curley’s wife’s death. According to the whole book, Lennie, a poor big man with mental problems, was fond of petting small animals such as mice and rabbits that were finally killed by Lennie accidentally. He has also displeased young ladies on the former farm by touching them rudely, which drove Lennie and George to work on the other farm. These foreshadows indicate that Lennie would definitely do harm to Curley’s wife when she invited him touching her.
A thriller and novella, Of Mice and Men, by John Steinbeck is about to very different men who lived in California during the great depression. They are hands on the ranches and they travel with each other through the bad, good, and the loneliness. There is no other friendship like theirs, it is like a companionship between an animal and its owner. Both of the men, George and Lennie, share a dream to live off of their own land. They are so close to their dream that they are making plans to buy the land but then Lennie did something bad, Lennie killed the wife of the ranch owner’s son.
The novel Of Mice and Men, by John Steinbeck is a gripping tale of two men and their lives during the Great Depression. George Milton and Lennie Small are two migrant workers who travel together finding work. They take on a new job “bucking barley” at a ranch in central California for the ranch owner and his son. While working at the ranch they encounter Curley the ranch owner’s son and his wife, a flirtatious woman. The story reaches a climax when Lennie unintentionally kills Curley’s wife and runs back to the Salinas River just as George instructed.
Of mice and Men A mental disease is a huge deal and many people struggle with it. Some people have it bad, and some just have a mild mental disorder. In the book, it shows how someone with a mental disease went wrong.
The dream was also brought up many times. George and Lennie’s dream of buying land and Lennie getting to tend the rabbits. It made the reader curious as to whether they were going to achieve this dream or not.
Shakespeare, an English playwright, poet, and actor, famously remarked: "By the pricking of my thumbs, something wicked this way comes. "In the novel Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck, tragedy is heavily foreshadowed. John Steinbeck's book Mice and Men portray the narrative of two helpful but unfortunate friends who hope to attain their own land but must overcome obstacles in life: George, the provider, and Lennie, his loyal but violent partner. Even though the reader may not know all that will happen, because of Steinbeck’s use of foreshadowing, the reader can be sure that three things will happen, one way or another, some examples include George and Lennie not getting the land they desire, the death of Curly’s wife, and the death of Lennie.
Ally Carter, a famous author, once said, “Death is the only thing that could have ever kept him from you” (Goodreads). This quote ties to the novel Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck because death really was the only thing that kept two close friends from separating. Of Mice and Men is centralized between the themes of hardship, friendship, and death. George and his simple-minded friend, Lennie, go through many tough situations and learn how to adjust and establish unknown outcomes. Although George did as much as he could to help Lennie along the way, in the end, there was only one final outcome.
there are two characters that interact with Crooks. Curley’s wife and Lennie. Lennie is a very strong man and he has a mental disability, and Curley’s wife is the only women on the ranch
The use of the ranch in the book ties into the American Dream in the story. But sometimes the dream can be unachievable which foreshadows to the story how everything went haywire and crazy where there dream never came true of them owning that little piece of land. The final example of foreshadowing in the story is document d “Right in the back of the head”. This article foreshadows Candy’s dog getting shot like Lennie gets shot for the sake of others.
Of Mice and Men by John Steinback (Fiction) 1. If I could change one thing from the book, I would change the fast that George killed Lennie. The reason I would change it is because it made me sad and I ended up crying. I would have changed it to where Lennie and George would have gone off with Candy and bought the farm and lived off of the land and lived happily ever after. 2.
The importance of dreams help motivate certain characters to chase after them. For example, George and Lennie have a dream of owning their own ranch. In the novel it states “Tell about that place, George…”(56).In which Lennie wants to be reminded about.
Lennie’s strength and his childish mind is his biggest struggle that affects many people on the ranch and himself. Lennie is overprotective of George and about being with him he would do anything for the guy, so when Crooks tells him, “S’pose he gets killed or hurt so he can’t come back. ”(71) Lennie then contradicts his opinion”This ain’t true. George ain’t got hurt.
Lastly Crooks goes through this theme because he has to stay in a room next to the barn and is isolated from the others because he is black. Steinbeck uses different factors to portray the loneliness and isolation within characters such as physical or mental, which then deliver various messages to readers. Curley’s wife struggles through loneliness and isolation because she is the only woman on the ranch. Curley’s wife is
Crooks later goes on a rant about how he’s practically alone most of the day, all because of his race. He took a sense of maligned humor in seeing Lennie’s despair about the possibility of losing George, along a mentality of “If I can’t have it, then
Moreover, the men living on the ranch share mutual dreams: To George, this dream of having their own place means independence, security, working for themselves, and, above all, being "somebody." To Lennie, the dream resembles the delicate creatures he pets: It means to him security, the duty of keeping an eye on the rabbits, and a place where he won't need to be scared. To Candy, it means security for seniority and a home where he will fit in. For Crooks, where he