In John Steinbek's novel "People and People", some characters make this book funny. For example, Slim and George are two similar people in some respects, but in many other respects it is different. They all want to be leaders, but only one of them is possible. George and Slim have many features, but Slim is considered a leader of a colleague and George has reason to think that it is not. George is an ordinary person, unlike Lenny who is mentally behind. Unlike Lennie and Curley's wife, he claims moral responsibility.
John Steinbeck's mouse and human relationship is indispensable to everyone's life. True friends will not make life dull, dark and sad. Loneliness is the main theme of The Mice and Men, George and Lennie stand out in Slim, Crooks and Candy. They have a unique and special connection to each other. Each role affects other roles. Although Steinbeck's description of relationships between men seems to be negligible, in fact it is immortal. - John Steinbeck was born in 1902 and is located in Salinas Valley, California and will eventually be the background for "Mouse and Man" and many other works. I studied literature and writing at Stanford University. He later moved to New York as a worker and journalist for five years until 1929 when he completed his first novel "Golden Cup". With the publication of Tortilla Flat in 1935, Steinbeck became famous and became a popular writer.
John Steinbeck (1902 - 1968) was born in Salinas, California, and also has a book titled "Mouse and Man". When John Steinbeck published the book "Mouse and Man", money is a very big problem. This time it was also called the Great Depression, it was called the Great Depression. - John Steinbeck's "relationship between humans and humans" is indispensable to all people's lives. True friends will not make life dull, dark and sad. Loneliness is the main theme of The Mice and Men, George and Lennie stand out in Slim, Crooks and Candy. They have a unique and special connection to each other. Each role affects other roles. The depiction of human relations by Steinbeck seems to be very slight, but it is actually immortal.