The transformation of John Steinbeck's "Mouse George" and "Mouse and Human" is a dramatic novel that depicts the treatment of various groups and the hardships of life during the Great Depression. Lenny and George are the hero of Curly and his wife Kandy, Slim and Crook. Giant, Lenny is very slow in spirit, is a friend of George, and in fact the novel as a whole has not changed. On the other hand, George is a small person, from imaginationists to more realistic and reasonable people.
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.
The transformation of John Steinbeck's "Mouse George" and "Mouse and Human" is a dramatic novel that depicts the treatment of various groups and the hardships of life during the Great Depression. Lenny and George are the hero of Curly and his wife Kandy, Slim and Crook. Giant, Lenny is very slow in spirit, is a friend of George, and in fact the novel as a whole has not changed. - The tragedy of isolation of mice and men The Great Depression of the 1930s was an era of confusion. Thousands of people lost their homes and lost their jobs. The whole family walks around this country, eats, rests and enthusiastically survives. Also, some men are traveling in the USA alone.
John Steinbeck 's 1937 masterpiece, mouse and man are the story of two of California' s roving farm workers, George Milton and Lenny during the Great Depression. In George, Steinbeck studied the tragedy of unrealistic possibilities. At Lenny, Steinbeck is exploring human vulnerability to power beyond our control. Curley features the externalization of this threat. He is a small man with a ferocious Napoleonic estate, despising Lenny's greater strength and size and uses his power as George and Lenny's son to confront temporarily the owner of Lenny's pasture . But through Collie 's wife, their destructive power is realized. She did not hurt, but she was lonely, and she asked Rennie for comfort. The end result is their death. At the present time, Curley's wife exemplifies the risk of randomness, especially those without power or options like Lenny or George. For such men, it is easy to become a victim of power beyond your control.