Plans In John Steinbeck's Of Mice And Men

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Though there are many plans that are made, many of them do not play out the way that they are supposed to. These plans often have the people that made them develop grief and suffering because of them.There many plans that are made in the book Of Mice and Men. One of the biggest plans if for Lennie and George to buy a house and for Lennie to tend the rabbits.Though there are many plans that are laid out, some of them do not go like they are supposed to and those that do lay the plan often times end up on the wrong end of the idea.
Even though there are a lot of plans that are talked about in Of Mice and Men, one of the biggest and most obvious ones is George and Lennie talking about getting their own farm and living there.One of the most important …show more content…

Tha’s three hunderd and’ fifty bucks I’d put in. I ain’t much good, but I could cook and tend the chickens and hoe the garden some…”. This all happened on page 60.The way that this helps to show how he had a dream was after his dog died he really had nothing, but once he heard the two talking he realized that he could help them with their dream. After he realized this he made their dream his dream and did everything he could to achieve this dream.Out of all of the plans from Of Mice and Men none of them go like they are supposed to. All of them backfire or straight up fail. Some of the characters with the plans are never even given a chance to go through with it. Out of all of these the novel just shows that even though we may lay down plans, life will not always go the way that we want it to and sometimes it might just come back and bite us in the