Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck: Book Cover

    Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck

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    (Paperback - Reissue)

    • Pub. Date: January 1993
    • 112pp
    • Sales Rank: 797

      Reader Rating: (571 ratings)

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      Product Details

      • Pub. Date: January 1993
      • Publisher: Penguin Group (USA) Incorporated
      • Format: Paperback, 112pp
      • Sales Rank: 797

      Synopsis

      The tragic story of the complex bond between two migrant laborers in Central California. They are George Milton and Lennie Small, itinerant ranch hands who dream of one day owning a small farm. George acts as a father figure to Lennie, who is a very large, simpleminded man, calming him and helping to reign in his immense physical strength.

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      Biography

      Chronicling American dreams destroyed by either injustice or the simple difficulty of the world, John Steinbeck left lasting testaments to the struggles of working people in The Grapes of Wrath and Cannery Row. His refusal to water down his realistic work got some of his books banned – and earned him a Nobel Prize.

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      Customer Reviews

      Teachers will love this! Everyone else, too!by RomanceWriter

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      November 11, 2009: I purchased this recording for my English classes. I was a bit hesitant due to past experiences. A lot of recordings do not follow the book, but this one does. Gary Sinese performs very well and he changes his inflection to match the moods. He also changes his voice for the characters.

      My students enjoyed listening to his smooth voice. Excellent.

      Pessimism and Realism-- Of Mice and Menby -EW

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      October 27, 2009: I think that Steinbeck made a lot of good points about the impossibility of the American dream with Of Mice and Men, and about the bad parts of the human nature. The book makes Steinbeck seem like a pessimist, but I think he is just a realist. He isn't deluding himself with false senses of everything turning out well in the future, but instead showing readers the brutal truth about dreams and life during the Great Depression and today. Though the thing that makes him right for saying this is that he blames it on humans and their minds. Lennie's innocence and George and Candy's blind hope in the novel shows that ignorance can lead to the pain of dreams being crushed, as can the predatory nature of people to feed on each other's weaknesses like the selfish beings we are. People are wrong by making things seem better in the moment, like how George consoles Lennie and reminds him of their plans for a successful future, instead of choosing what's best for the long run--giving him the power of knowledge--even if it can create a 'pessimistic' attitude. At the end of the book, Steinbeck reinforces his point as George cater's to his own self-indulgent needs by killing Lennie. The men that work with Lennie and George believe in an eye for an eye, believe in murdering Lennie for his killing Curley's wife, even when he was ignorant, innocent, not knowing what he had done because of his mental condition. They didn't let him plead ignorance, instead vengeful and vicious towards him, preying on his weakness--trust--and using it to their advantage. Because of this, and overall, I think that Steinbeck's views on human nature and optimism are very real, very intelligent, and hopefully eye-opening to many people. Of Mice and Men shows the world for what it is, and what it should be seen as, and I highly recommend reading it and considering the points it makes therein.


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