The first interesting point brought up was about why the chapters always opened up with a detailed description of the surroundings and how the characters never moved to a new location. This was interesting because it brought up how Steinbeck wrote it as a play-novelette. This was brought up by Madelyn. The second interesting point was about whether or not Lennie related to what Crook told him about his childhood. This was interesting because it discussed Lennie’s past and how he must have been treated when he was younger. This was brought up by Jen. One question I still have is about if Crook, Candy, and Lennie understood that Curley’s wife was probably also lonely if they would treat her differently. Curley’s wife never leaves the farm and
Steinbeck foreshadows the death of Lennie many ways throughout the novel. Lennie has a tendency to mess up. For example, George said in the beginning of the novel if he ever got in trouble to go by the brush and wait for him to arrive. When Lennie killed the pup and Curley's wife he went to the brush and waited for George. Lennie also had trouble with pets or feeling soft things. For example, he killed the mice he always held or played with. This foreshadows that Lennie has the strength and ability to kill someone or something without trying or wanting to. When Candy's dog was was old and suffering, Carlson grabbed his Luger and shot the dog in the back of the head. This foreshadows that someone is going to die. For example, George grabbed
How does Steinbeck present the characters of Crooks and Curley 's wife ? In what way are these minor characters shown to be significant throughout the novel ?
After the Great Depression, many things changed, different\\ genders and races were all treated differently. Blacks and white women were forced to be outcast in the world, women belonged in the house and blacks did not belong anywhere. In the book Of Mice and Men, John Steinbeck portrays perfectly of how blacks and women were separated from everyone else with Curley’s wife and Crooks, the black stable hand. Curley’s wife and Crooks are alike in many ways; in their loneliness, the way they are separated from everyone else and how they get out casted from everything, discriminated against during the time period; which helps show how blacks and women were treated during this time period of life.
	This story opens with the main character named Jim Nolan leaving behind his former life and going to meet Harry Nilson, a leader of the "Party." Jim had a father killed in a riot, a mother who died, and a sister that was missing. He wants to join the "Party" because he wants to do something that will give his life meaning. He is accepted, and is introduced to other members of the party. The next day, Jim accompanies Mac McLeod to Torgas Valley to help workers organize a strike against the orchard owners in the valley. They meet a restaurant car owner named Al, who gives them food for free. Jim and Mac get off the train and meet a group of people. They help a
Plot/Summary: My novel takes place in Monterey, California where Mack and the boys try and to set up a party for doc until things don’t go as planned. Mack, the boys, and a group of unemployed men helping them out. They try and set up the party in Docs lab which is also known as his house. Lee Chong is a grocery store owner and offers to buy Mack and the boys some beer. Mack attempts to do stuff but every time he gets him self in trouble. Eddie is a back up bartender at the local bar and brings home stolen bottles after work. Gay stays with the boys because his wife likes to beat him but he is often in jail or at the bar because of all the fights he gets into with his wife, Doc finds a couple of dead people laying on the
Discovering America's reality. In the novel,"Travels with Charley in Search of America", John Steinbeck sets goals for himself to rediscover America. During the trip to find America, Steinbeck chooses to collaborate with the people of America. In Steinbeck's journey he encounters people that were influential toward the trip by helping him understand that their are no real archetypes in America: Robbie's father, The Actor, and The Brave Grey Man.
I. John Steinbeck used his personal experiences as a laborer to write many of his novels like Of Mice and Men and The Grapes of Wrath.
There are many authors, poetry writers, and novelists around this world, but what make them into a famous author or writer? One of the famous American writer was John Steinbeck. He earned a Nobel prize of literature from his American classic novels that he had written in the past. The Nobel prize was not the only award that he had earned for his literature, he earned different awards for his writings also (John Stein..). John Steinbeck is a man who had overcome different obstacles and being successful in life.
In this novella, I developed a thesis statement, which is: The pearl kept Kino moving forward because it represented hope during a period in his life. I chose this thesis statement because one of the aspects that makes this story move forward is Kino’s hope and greed; even if this greed is based on his hope. Steinbeck quotes: “Every man suddenly became related to Kino’s pearl, the schemes, the plans, the futures, the wishes, the needs, the lusts, the hungers of everyone, and only one person stood in the way and that was Kino, so he became curiously everyman’s enemy” (Steinbeck, 27).
Every great writer had their own influences, John Steinbeck was no exception. Steinbeck’s influences cam from family, friends, and his environment to write detailed descriptions to involve or influence the reader. Whenever someone reads one of John Steinbeck’s works they are in immersed in the scene he is describing, he makes you feel as if you are right there experiencing everything there first hand.
Through the intricate foundation of America, one can argue it’s inability to reach satisfaction. Among the nation itself, there always seems to be a sense of hunger into wanting more and more than one can bear to have. It’s a way of life that citizens of America are used to approaching. They reasoned that not being completely satisfy is the key into building our lives around morals, standards, and expectations for the future generations. From a complex writer himself, John Steinbeck, approaches this unrealistic to perfectionistic idea that America finds itself having in his critical essay, “Paradox and Dream”.
On Thursday, February 27th, 1902, John Steinbeck in Salinas, California, and was born following his two older sisters, Esther and Beth, to the parents of former educator Olive Hamilton and Sperry Flour Mill supervisor, John Ernst Steinbeck. Steinbeck’s childhood was similar to any others, as his adolescent years were carefree and relaxed. By the age of four, in the vast land of Salinas, Steinbeck was given a pony, later becoming the inspiration of his famous, well-acclaimed novel, The Red Pony. Later on his ninth birthday, his aunt, Molly, gifted him a copy of Le Morte d’Arthur written by Thomas Malory, which began his start of being a voracious reader. Steinbeck loved words, and reading old-fashioned words like the ones Malory used pleased
The book the pearl was full with a variety of action and surprising events. The author Steinbeck's moral argument of money doesn't buy happiness is demonstrated in every event occurring in the book. Kino and Juana made the right decision to throw the pearl away because it was an object that brought harm. This novella could have had a variety of different endings.
John Steinbeck, author of the critically acclaimed Grapes of Wrath, once said, “Maybe the hardest thing in writing is simply to tell the truth about things as we see them.”* Steinbeck has quite the history of trying to stump his audience, and it appears that he enjoys cryptic answers in this case as well. I believe Steinbeck is trying to say that writers have a tendency to not write what they truly want to, because of a multitude of reasons. Perhaps it’s the fear of an author’s idea being scoffed at, due to it being viewed as illogical or irrelevant, or maybe because of monetary reasons (i.e., an author may want to tackle a relatively controversial topic, that would ostracize a certain group of customers, leading his editor/publisher to advocate
Curley’s wife constantly complains how lonely she is as Curley is not around most of the time. This drives her to wander about the ranch talking to other men and questioning them about Curley's whereabouts. As most of the men are in town, Curley’s wife wanders to the barn where Candy, Crooks, and Lennie are currently located. The men question why she is there and see her as a nuisance. But, she stays and discusses her struggles with loneliness. “‘I get lonely,’ she said, ‘You can talk to people, but I can’t talk to nobody but Curley, else he gets mad. How’d you like not to talk to nobody’” (Steinbeck 87). In other words, Curley’s wife is left alone by Curley so much that she feels the need to talk to anybody that she finds. This is why she wanders about the ranch all day and talks to any men she can find. This demonstrates how women were treated during this time; they were thought to be unimportant and were often left alone by their spouses. Curley’s wife did not have a name, which shows how unimportant she really is. Women were thought to be of no use, leaving them to not have the ability to achieve the American dream.