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How Does Steinbeck Characterize Curley's Wife

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The mystery, the troublemaker, the mischief maker, all these words are used to describe a single person, the wife of the man named Curley. This woman whose name is not ever mentioned in the book, is a character from the book Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck. The presence of this woman alone caused mischief, distrust, a bit of rivalry, and mishap on the farm among the coworkers of her husband. This trouble is demonstrated when Slim says to Curley, ¨ Well, you been askin´ me too often. I 'm gettin´ God d*** sick of is. If you can 't look after your own God d*** wife, what you expect me to do about it? You lay offa me.¨ ( John Steinbeck, page sixty-two). Since she liked to hang around places and never stayed at home, her husband Curley …show more content…

I could get you strung up on an tree so easy is aint even funny.¨ ( John Steinbeck, page eighty-one). Is can also be seen with her reaction to her husband getting badly injured, ¨Awright, cover ´im up if ya wanta. Whatta I care? You bindle bums think you 're so d*** good. Whatta ya think I am, an kid?¨ ( John Steinbeck, page seventy-eight). Towards the end of the book she tries to find out more about the incident with her husband by talking to Lennie and she ends up sharing her whole life story with him and then ends up dead because she let him stroke her hair because he liked how it felt. When she gave him permission to touch her hair he said that is was soft and started to stroke it harder, which then caused her to react in a scared and angry manner, she then began to act more aggressively in order to escape his firm and vigorous grip, but is just caused more harm. Curley 's wife started to scream and Lennie decided to tighten his clench on her body to silence her wails. His actions were too encroaching on her body and it caused him to snap her neck in a matter of seconds, which therefore, caused her to die in a pretty deplorable form. This incident is demonstrated in the book when Lennie says, ¨ I done a bad thing. I done another bad thing.¨ ( John Steinbeck, page ninety-one). This quote shows and tells what Lennie is thinking and feeling when he kills Curley 's wife on accident.
If her death in the book hadn 't happened, I imagine her life to be

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