The title is taken from a Robert Burn's poem titled "To A Mouse." In the poem, a plow overturns a mouse's burrow, to which Burns writes, "The best laid plans of mice and men often go awry." Just like the mouse, George and Lennie's dream to have a plot of land of their own and be their own bosses is shattered by unforeseeable circumstances.
yes
because
weak and strong
"Of Mice and Men" is set in California during the Great Depression. The story mainly takes place on a ranch near Soledad, and the characters also travel to a nearby town called Weed.
John Steinbeck, the author, wrote Of Mice and Men as a short story, not a book. It is a parable.
No, "Of Mice and Men" by John Steinbeck does not have a sequel. The story ends with a tragic event and does not continue in a second book.
Of Mice And Men
''Of Mice And Men'' is a story of the extrodinary friendship between two workers at the time of Great Depression in America.(1930's)
The title of the novel 'Of Mice and Men' comes from a poem called 'To a Mouse' by Robert Burns
In "Of Mice and Men," Susy and Clara are not characters in the story. The main characters are George Milton and Lennie Small.
The overall message of this story is that i don't know
"Of Mice and Men" was first published under the same title in 1937.