point of view
The book by John Steinbeck, has from my perception, has a total of three point of views.
From George, Lennie, and the one small chapter from Crooks, the stable-buck.
George's chapters all they seem to be consisting of complaining about how Lennie is the biggest dolt there is in the world, and why he may still be following my order and why he isn't following his own thought process.
Lennie's point of view seems to be most innocent, trying to make things go his own way, and thinking everyone will be okay he leaves, and following George's orders about life. Even though in the last chapter, Lennie seems to realize that George would be planning his death all along, and this is the most perfect place to do it.
While the one chapter where we get Crooks narrating it for us, he sees everything from a different outlook on life, on how he may have been the worker there the longest, yet he doesn't have the same opportunities as white men, and he loathes them for it, yet he still wants to interact with the workers and maintain a friendship is they allow it.
From George, Lennie, and the one small chapter from Crooks, the stable-buck.
George's chapters all they seem to be consisting of complaining about how Lennie is the biggest dolt there is in the world, and why he may still be following my order and why he isn't following his own thought process.
Lennie's point of view seems to be most innocent, trying to make things go his own way, and thinking everyone will be okay he leaves, and following George's orders about life. Even though in the last chapter, Lennie seems to realize that George would be planning his death all along, and this is the most perfect place to do it.
While the one chapter where we get Crooks narrating it for us, he sees everything from a different outlook on life, on how he may have been the worker there the longest, yet he doesn't have the same opportunities as white men, and he loathes them for it, yet he still wants to interact with the workers and maintain a friendship is they allow it.