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How Does Steinbeck Use Foreshadowing In Of Mice And Men

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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. Her husband is after Lennie and he is going to kill him, so George has to kill Lennie himself because he doesn’t want Lennie to feel any pain. To make the novella all come together with twists and turns Steinbeck uses foreshadowing. Iin the first portion of the book there is some examples of foreshadowing right when Lennie and George get to the bunkhouse and the ranch. Lennie keeps saying to George, “Le’s go, George. Le’s get outta here. It’s mean here”. (33) Lennie has great instinct like an animal and he knows that there is trouble and that the …show more content…

If the reader pays attention to the gestures of George they could tell that the friendship of Lennie and George would be broken. George’s gesture is dealing out cards for the game solitaire. Solitaire is only game for one and it foreshadows that George is going to be on his own and lonely because Lennie is going to die. Although all the foreshadowing lead to Lennie’s death there is another example of it that does not coincide with the ending. Steinbeck makes the setting of the bunkhouse where the hands live like a reality. It shows that Lennie and George can’t run out reality like they think they can. Reality is what the book is all about. The characters are going through the hard part of reality, especially because of the time period and the great

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