Soledad, California - Last week on a sunny Saturday morning, the death of a ranch owners daughter in law occurred at Tyler Ranch near Salinas River at the hands of a ranch worker, Lennie Small. The workers on Tyler Ranch had all been enjoying a game of horseshoes out in the front of the ranch, while Lennie was in the barn with his pet pup. It had only been a couple of months since Lennie and his best pal, George Milton came to the ranch looking for work. “He was strange, he hardly ever spoke, goddamit I should have known to never hire such a punk,” states the Boss. Apparently Curley Wife had wondered in the barn looking for a way out of summer heat as she usually does, there she found Lennie. Old Candy was the first to see the body and
He was brought up by his aunt, Clara. When Clara died, George Small, Lennie’s best friend, took care of him, and they became partners. They found and lost jobs easily, because of Lennie’s enormously strength and his unstable mind. The last job they had before this ranch had ended miserably with Lennie and George fleeing from their Boss, because Lennie was accused of sexual assaulting one of the females. Lennie was seen going into the barn before the death of Curley’s wife, so it was clear that he killed Curley’s wife. Lennie ran from the barn right after the killing, but was eventually shot in the head by his own partner,
From the very first we hear of her, Curley’s wife is portrayed in a negative light. Immediately following a brief conversation with Curley’s wife, George remembers what Candy had told him, and warned Lennie to stay away: “Don’t you even take a look at that b****. I don’t care what she says and what she does. I seen ‘em poison before, but I never seen no piece of jail bait worse than her. You leave her be” (32).
The story Of Mice and Men takes place on the Tyler Ranch in the Salinas Valley in northern California. It seems to be an idyllic place to work yet some of the characters are lonely and need some company. Curley’s wife Ruby was looking for him when she first came into the story she asked if George and Lennie had seen Curley. Ruby in the story is considered a “rat trap” or in modern english a “tramp.” Crooks isn’t allowed to be in the bunkhouse, so they put him in the barn with only books to keep him company.
In the novel Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck, the author presents a story about two men working to someday reach their goals of owning their own farm. Lennie, one of the men, gets in the way of their dreams with his strength, forgetfulness, and love of soft things. Lennie’s strength and obsession with soft things later gets him into trouble. When Lennie accidentally breaks a woman’s neck while feeling her hair, George must shoot Lennie to protect him from a life locked in an asylum. This book has many parallels to the poem, “To a Mouse,” by Robert Burns.
During the Great Depression, families lost everything as banks crashed and dust swirled over the barren landscape of the Midwest. Parents left their homes and bundled their children and worldly possessions into their cars and headed west to the land of hope in California. In this time, it is difficult to think of groups bonding together, especially as workers compete for limited agricultural jobs on ranches. However, while John Steinbeck’s characters in the novella Of Mice and Men isolate themselves in some ways from the world, they are also interconnected in webs of community throughout their ranch. Curley’s wife, Crooks, George Milton, and Lennie Small are all
Will Smith once said, “The women who don’t seek attention are usually the women you need to be giving your attention to”. This quote relates to Mice and Men because Curley’s wife is in the observe situation, where with her actions, she is pleading for attention but gets none in return. In the novel, Mice and Men, written by John Steinbeck, the only female in the book is killed because the men think she is troublesome and bait for problems. Through the use of the men’s and the narrator’s diction, characterization, and the men’s assumptions, Steinbeck portrays how desperate Curley’s wife is for attention, later resulting in her death, which inturn causes the death of someone else.
“‘Ain’t I got a right to talk to nobody?’”, states Curley’s wife (87). This quote reflects a lot on what times were like back in the 1930’s. The story Of Mice and Men is an amazingly written story showing fictional examples that happened during the Great Depression. In the book Of Mice and Men the characters Lennie, Crooks, and Curley’s wife are facing discrimination almost everyday. Whether it’s about race, gender, being a cripple, or mental health, at least one of them have gone through these tough struggles.
Thesis: Through Curley’s wife, George and Lennie, and Crooks; Steinbeck demonstrates that dreams may go askew in the face of greater forces. Dreams prove ultimately harmful for those delegated to the margins of society. Crooks’ dream of not being in isolation represents powerlessness in the face of racial discrimination. As Lennie enter Crooks room, Crooks tries to apprehend him but gives in and lets him stay.
“By Christ, he’s gotta talk when he’s spoke to. What the hell are you gettin’ in for?” (Steinbeck, 25) Of Mice and Men was written by author John Steinbeck. This novel contains a guy named Curley who is the boss's son and is evil. Even though he is mean and acts hard he is overprotective of his wife. The overprotectiveness in Curley in Of Mice and Men clearly symbolizes Steinbeck’s theme that caring for someone means that you need to invest your time in them and give them attention.
In Of Mice & Men, the character Curley’s Wife is depicted as flirtatious, promiscuous, and insensitive. However, her husband Curley sees her as only a possession. Most of the workers at the ranch see her as a tart, whereas Slim, the peaceful and god-like figure out of all the men, see her as lonely. This answer will tell us to which extent, is Curley’s wife a victim, whether towards her flirtatious behaviour, or to everyone’s representation of her.
Curley’s wife is the loneliest character in the book. This is shown when she is in the stable with Crooks, Lennie and Candy, she whines, 'Think I don't like to
Curley’s wife from John Steinbeck's Of Mice and Men is an important character to the plot and themes of the novel. She is first introduced as the new wife of Curley who is very flirtatious. She grew up in Salinas and had dreams of being a Hollywood actress. However, her mother would not allow her to follow her dreams since she was only sixteen. So, she married Curley, who she met at a dance, and lives on the ranch with him and the other ranch workers. Throughout the novel, Curley's wife shows that she has a ignorant and flirtatious personality but is also very lonely.
Steinbeck's novel 'Of Mice and Men' explores the everyday lives of migrant workers during the Great Depression. In this era, American men were forced to leave their families and become 'drifters'. These were people who didn't have a fixed job and continually moved from place to place.
John Steinbeck describes a world where the American Dream is easy to believe, but impossible to achieve. Steinbeck paints a powerful and intriguing portrait of America in the 1930s. He reveals the real hardships of life during the Great depression. In the book Of Mice and Men, two men of polar opposites go on a journey from the town of Weed to Soledad where a ranch provides work to survive. All the characters are different in some way but they share one thing,the desire for companionship.
The last event that was influenced by Curley’s wife is Lennie’s death. In fact, she was the cause of it. After having killed her, Lennie escaped to the pond, just like George had said. George looked for him and had to kill him, otherwise he would have been killed in a much more violent way by Curley or one of the other men on the