Sean Dougherty
Of
Mice and Men
John Steinbeck
Realistic Fiction
Just Right
Just Finished
1. The
book Of Mice of Men by John Steinbeck
is about the non-traditional family of George and Lennie. George and Lennie are
ranchers during the Great Depression looking to reach the American Dream.
However an action of Lennie’s has set that goal as good as done. Lennie is
mentally crippled; he has bad memory and panics when others yell at him. So one
time when George and the others ranchers were in town having a good town, and
Lennie was all by himself in a shed, he was greeted by Curley’s wife. Curley is
the boss’s son; he is very short and jealous about others. Curley’s wife wanted
to be an actress, but never got the letter, so she married Curley who she even
says in mean to her. She starts to talk to Lennie who refuses the conservation,
eventually gives in. Curley’s wife notices the puppy that Lennie killed and
supports him by telling him it is just a mutt, no big deal. She approaches him
and begins to flirt with him. Lennie explains that he likes to feel nice and
soft things. So she lets him feel her hair. Lennie won’t let go and messes up
her hair, she starts to yell. Lennie panics, covers her mouth, and looses
control. He breaks her neck and kills her. Lennie flees to the brush near the
river where George told him to go if he got in any trouble. Back at the ranch,
the word gets out. All the ranchers go out to find and kill Lennie, including
George. George goes ahead to try and find Lennie before the ranchers do. He
succeeds, but his plan soon changes. He talks to Lennie about the place they
were going to have and how Lennie could tend the rabbits. He tricks Lennie to
look around the river. Then, George shoots Lennie in the back of the head where
Lennie won’t even feel it.
2. When
the book ended, my feelings totally changed. I used to think of the book
poorly, but know I feel like the plot all tied in to the unsuspecting ending.
However this made me think a lot. What George did to Lennie was just an act of
love and compassion. Right then I really enjoyed the book. The plot had me at
the unsuspecting death of Curley’s wife and
what could possibly happen next. But when George killed him, I just put the
book down and stared at the wall for a short time. Also, the contrasting
characters played a huge part in how I felt about this book. I was just
fascinated about how Lennie’s mind works and how the other characters mix in
with him. George is part of his family, Curley wants his size, and Candy’s dog
is his equal. Candy is like George, always taking care of his dog that is like
Lennie who Candy had to give up to die for his own good.
3. The
finishing act of the book led me to believe that love and compassion was the
theme of the book. At the end of the book, George shoots Lennie to save him.
George knew that if he didn’t shoot Lennie, the other ranchers would capture
him and force a slow, painful death. I was an act of love and compassion to
kill Lennie so he wouldn’t feel anything. Also, Lennie and George have a dream
to own their own piece of land. But Lennie especially wants to tend the rabbits
on their farm. That is his happy place and George probably wanted to take him
their. Achieving the American Dream back during the Great Depression is nearly
impossible. So sending Lennie to heaven was the only way to have him tend the
rabbits. After all, George and Lennie always supported and loved each other as
one non-traditional family.
4. My
favorite character would have to be George. In Lennie’s case, overprotection in
never enough and George really tried to shield Lennie for the possible
self-afflicted damage on the ranch. I feel like George is just a good person,
I’m sure not that many people would stick with Lennie after knowing who he is
and what he did in Weed. But George was extremely faithful and
believed that Lennie could live a happy life. However, George’s hope runs thin
when he figures out that Lennie killed Curley’s wife and that nothing will ever
be the same for them. He knew Lennie had no way out of this one, so he did the
right thing and sent Lennie to a better place in an act of love and compassion.
5. My
least favorite character in this novel would have to be Curley. He is jealous
and mean when he really doesn’t want to be. First, Curley doesn’t except
himself. He thinks he is different just because he is small compared to his
father. He uses anger to make up for his lack of height. This of coarse doesn’t
work, it just make him be smaller and farther away from others. Also, since he
is the boss’s son, he doesn’t really have a place with the other ranchers. Basically,
he has no friends. However he has brought that upon himself. His wife said it
herself, he is mean to even his wife.
6. The
ending being George killing Lennie threw my past prediction way off. At the
beginning of the book when George was explaining to Lennie about their piece of
land they were going to have, I believed George. I thought that all these books
would end happily, that was until I remembered how old I was. Soon I caught
notice of the way Steinbeck was using foreshadowing, especially when George
told Lennie to hide in the brush if something bad happened. After that I made a
new prediction that something bad was going to happen that would change the
entire dream of the novel. Something bad did happen, Lennie killed Curley’s
wife and Lennie did go hide in the brush. Steinbeck wouldn’t have put that in
there if it wasn’t going to happen. For me, foreshadowing really gave the book
away.
Hi Sean,
ReplyDeleteI read your blog post and I thought it was really good. Actually there was one part in this that I really agreed with you on. That was when you talked the way you liked the book because of its unexpected ending and I agree with that. Since originally I thought that George and Lennie were going to be alright and go off and live there dream. But instead George kills Lennie which I was not expecting.
Something I didn't really agree on was what you thought the theme of the book was. Since yes George and Lennie's bond did have a lot of love and compassion but that was the only area. Unlike all the other characters witch didn't have any love or compassion. Mostly because a lot of them were alone like Candy after he lost is dog and Crooks being separated by racism.
Overal I still really enjoyed reading your blog post.
from Seth