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Loneliness And Despair In John Steinbeck's Of Mice And Men

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Loneliness and Despair Everyone needs a little friendship and love to survive. This is the message John Steinbeck is trying to put out in his book, Of Mice and Men. There are three very lonely characters that don’t do much and are always by themselves. That is Crooks, Candy, and Curley’s wife. Crooks is a lonely stable buck that is always alone in his room. He takes care of the horses and mules in the barn. Crooks is discluded because he is a different color than the other men. No one has the right to come in his room and he has no right to go into theirs. In the middle of the book, when all the guys are gone into town, Lennie stays at the farm to play with the pup. Lennie is very curious and when he sees Crooks light on, he walks right in. Crooks was …show more content…
He is old and is no use anymore to the farm, he lost his hand in a farm accident. He can not tend the fields nor carry bags of barley around. Candy really does not have many friends that talk to him, until George and Lennie came. Especially Lennie, he would talk to Candy a lot because he didn’t play games or anything with the guys, all he did was work. When he is in the bunk house, George and Lennie talk about the dream house, Candy chips in the conversation and tells them how he wants to come. He says to them, “I'd make a will an' leave my share to you guys in case I kick off, 'cause I ain't got no relatives nor nothing.” (Steinbeck 59). He does not have any family or relatives to be with, so going with George and Lennie is the only thing he has. In the book, Of Mice and Men, John Steinbeck has made three characters in his book who are very lonesome. Crooks, Curley’s wife, and Candy are the most lonely and isolated in the book. Crooks is black, Curley’s wife is flirty and taken, and Candy is old and no help. Steinbeck uses three main characters to be lonely and abandoned to show his message of saying that everyone needs a little friendship and love to

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