John Steinbeck's novel "The Mouse and the Man" is a story about friendship, loneliness, and desire. Two travelers, George and Lenny, work as farm workers in a place called Soledad. When George accepted Lenny's life, the story ended. The best representation of this is Collie's wife (son of a boss) who is one of the most important people in this book. When Lenny and George arrived at the farm and took Collie's wife to her dormitory, in their everyday life of "Looking for Collie" they began to cheat with them as soon as they saw both It was.
Curry's wife in the male and men and Lord Crook - Chesterfield said "We must pay attention to people and them." When applying this logic to Curry's wife and Crooks, race and sex differ, but in many respects it is the same. These two unfortunate souls live in a world full of broken dreams, discrimination, loneliness. Langston Hughes once said, "If a dream dies and sticks to a dream, life is a broken bird that can not fly."
In John Steinbeck's novel "The Mouse and the Man", "American Dream" is considered impossible. This is especially true in the case of George, Renee, Candy, Crook, Curley's wife. All of these characters allow you to imagine "American dream"; freedom to pursue happiness without dreams and dreams. The dream of ownership of Johnny and Lenny's land was unattainable as he ignored his physical strength and led to Lenny's negligence. When harassed, George reminds Renee not to retaliate at all times. But George knows that Lenny will inevitably take action and endanger their dreams. It was obvious when George noticed that Lenny had murdered Corrie's wife. "- I think I knew it from the beginning, I think we will never do her, perhaps we are" "(Steinbeck, 2006, p. 107)