John Steinbeck, the author of “Of Mice and Men” is about two ranch workers who have been together for a long time. The two workers are named George and Lennie. George Milton is described as small and with very sharp features and his partner Lennie Small is huge and a hard worker. Lennie however has a learning disability and George tries the best he can to keep him out of trouble. Sometimes the pair can have some trouble with each other but they always get through it together.Lennie and George work very hard in the fields so they can move up together to buy a ranch. George is the brains who tells Lennie what to do and Lennie is the muscle who can work really hard. George is basically Lennie’s only family that we know of and Lennie looks up …show more content…
There was Curley who is the boss's son and hated Lennie because he was bigger than him. One night, after a few days at the ranch, Lennie was in the barn and accidently killed his puppy that Slim have given him. Curley’s wife happened to be there and was just there looking for attention. She asked Lennie to pet her hair and he did but when asked to stop he held on. Lennie got scared when she yelled and accidently broke her neck that made her died instantly. Lennie was worried and mad because he had done a bad thing and George wasn't going to let him tend to the rabbits anymore. So then he ran to a bush that George had said if anything went wrong to go and hide there and he’ll come looking for him. George then went to find Lennie and he was by the bush where he told him too hide.When George have arrived to Lennie, he was upset for he knew that what has to be done next would not be easy. Although Lennie said he’ll hide from the world George had no choice but to take his life. In the end the only thing that they had were each other. This shows that no matter how different two people are they can make a
George had in his mind that he was going to buy land and have a house and a garden and also have farm animals. Lennie knows about this so George always tells him about it and how Lennie can tend the rabbits as long as he doesn’t screw up again, Which we soon find out, he screws up badly. George and Lennie soon find another job being ranch hands. They meet a lot of new people and George starts becoming friends with some of them. From the start of working there though, George and Lennie start having problems with the boss's son, Curley.
Lennie adored the softness of Curley’s wife’s hair, that he killed her by accident by crushing her skull when trying to pet her hair. The two planned a future together; their own dream ranch. A ranch where nobody could tell them what to do. A ranch where no trouble would come their way and they couldn’t get into trouble. Right before George put him out from the back of the head with the luger, he made Lennie think of their dream ranch, their future home.
The fictional novel Of Mice And Men, by John Steinbeck depicts a tragic time during The Great Depression of two migrant ranch workers. George Milton and Lennie Small are the main characters, who have known each other since they were younger, and because of special circumstances George vowed to look after Lennie. The novel takes place near the Salinas River in California resulting in their shared dream of having a ranch of their own. As the two approach a ranch, they realize that it would be a felicitous place to stay in, as long as their plans go as planned. Despite the troubles they endure Lennie and George manage to stick by each others side.
Curley decided that since Lennie violently shook and killed his beloved wife, he should be the one to kill Lennie. Not only that, but furthermore that Lennie is to be shot in the gut, so that he can have a slower, more painful death. But, this was not alright with George, so he decides to do something about it. A lady named Brittany Maynard was speaking over the phone to the press and said, "I'm not killing myself. Cancer is killing me.
John Steinbeck illustrates the theme of trust and loyalty by demonstrating the enormous bond that George and Lennie have in the book, Of Mice and Men. In Of Mice and Men, Steinbeck uses two distinct men who travel together in search of jobs to create this intriguing and diverse novel. Lennie Small, who isn’t so small, has a few mental issues.
One of John Steinbeck most notable works, Of Mice and Men, a novella based on American life in the 1910s, tells the story of George and Lennie. Two ranch workers based in California who travel around the state trying to find work during the Great Depression. As George and Lennie are hired at a new farm, concepts such as friendship and violence appear in the novella. Steinbeck develops these ideas using elements such as imagery, syntax, and details. Towards the end of chapter one, Lennie and George had gotten into an argument, an argument bad enough for Lennie to suggest that he leaves.
In the book of mice and men there are two characters named George and Lennie. George and Lennie were robust friends and had known each other from a young age. They worked and traveled together. Lennie was not completely sane and couldn 't help it. In the book of “mice and men” Lennie murders a lady.
When the book Mice and Men starts, We meet two of the main characters named Lennie Small, and George Milton. Lennie acts as if he is a lunatic. George acts if he was Lennies father. The men are heading towards a ranch in order to work. We learn Lennie is fascinated with touching the softness of items such as a dress, which got them ran out of their last home.
This can relate to the first moment of hardship in getting the ranch that they so wretchedly wanted, which is the loss of their first job in Weed. Losing their first job in Weed causes a setback in money because there is no longer a reliable steady income. Now Lennie and George must find a new job which cause them to lose even more money because they are wasting money. A second portion is to this puzzle is that Lennie and George do not have good relationships when finding their new job with their bosses son. This is a problem because if at any moment Lennie causes some type of trouble they are the first to go.
Lennie could not look after himself so Lennies aunt told george to look after him. They are farm hands who go from plantation to plantation working for the farm owners. They both have a particular goal in mind; to have their own piece of land and not have to work anymore. Even though many others would try to argue that George's decision in killing Lennie was the wrong
In the book, Of Mice and Men John Steinbeck tells a story about to men named George and Lennie, and how they went to work on a ranch. Throughout the story we see Georges struggles with Lennie and how they escalate. George benefited from having to take care of Lennie, which suggests that responsibility is good for character, but also requires many sacrifices. George enjoyed being with Lennie, but it was not easy for him.
Although George sometimes abuses Lennie’s blind loyalty, they think of each other as family and establish that they will always be there for each other. For example, George and Lennie share a dream in which they own a farm and live off of the land and look out for each other as a family. Faced with many hardships, George and Lennie maintain a strong bond. This example of unbreakable friendship and loyalty shows that no matter how different two people are, they are able to create inseparable relations and become true friend even when faced with
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.
John Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men is a short novel that packs a punch and really looks back at America’s past and mistakes. Steinbeck paints a picture of the late 1920s and early 1930s through two men, George and Lennie. George looks after the mentally challenged Lennie and must take action by soon ending Lennie’s life. The characters in the novel all struggle with heartbreaking conflicts but, no one else suffers more than Lennie and George. These conflicts are often supported imagery in the text.
The author explores a variety of themes telling the story of George and Lennie, two agricultural field workers who are bound to each other but diametrically opposite in character. Lennie is a simple-minded man who is not in control of his strength,