A true is a person who a person who’s closer to you than anybody else. That one friend who can always be counted on; everyone has a best friend and they protect each other. The book Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck is about two unlikely friends with a dream of owning their own land. These two are George and Lennie. They find work on a ranch outside of Salinas, California and when their dream seems to be in reaching distance, everything turns sour and George has to make a hard decision by killing Lennie. Although it can be argued that George isn’t a true friend to Lennie, it is clear that George is Lennie’s one true friend because George always takes care of him and cares deeply about him. Some people might argue that George isn’t a true …show more content…
A time where this happens is when George and Lennie are trying to get jobs at a ranch in the Salinas Valley in California. George tells Lennie to let him do all the talking because he’s afraid that Lennie will make a bad impression on the boss. When they are first talking to the boss he turns to Lennie and asks him a simple question: “In a panic, Lennie looked at George for help. ‘He can do anything you tell him.,’ George said. ‘He’s a good skinner, he can rassle grain bags, drive a cultivator. He can do anything. Just give him a try’” (p. 22). Lennie didn’t know what to do so he turned to George for help like he often does. George intervened and saved Lennie from not getting the job. George is a true friend to Lennie because he complimented Lennie and made him sound good to the boss which led him to get the job. Without George saying those things Lennie wouldn’t have been able to get the job. He would’ve looked bad in front of boss so he might not’ve hired him. Another example of how George always takes care of Lennie is when George is talking to Slim about why they “left” their old job. Lennie got in trouble with the authorities when a girl said he raped her: “‘The guys in Weed start a party out to lynch Lennie. So we sit in a irrigation ditch under water all the rest of that day. Got on’y our heads sticking out from the side of the ditch. An’ that night we scrammed