SPOILER
SPOILER
SPOILER
At the end of the novel, Lennie has made too many mistakes, and people are looking for him. George doesn't want Lennie to be captured and suffer what the mobs will do to him, so he tells Lennie a nice story about the rabbits, and shoots him in the back of the head.
In the end of "Of Mice and Men," George chooses to shoot Lennie as an act of mercy, to spare him from a more brutal and uncertain fate at the hands of others. This decision is made out of love and compassion, as George did not want Lennie to suffer in a harsh world that he wouldn't be able to navigate on his own.
George killed lennie and the other was lennie killed curlys wife
I don't think there is any real climax in the novel, but their is definitely an anticlimax at the end of the novel. Throughout the novel clues are unfolded into how the story could end (Lennie's death/ death of Candy's dog/ death of mouse).
Lennie is always Soft. We can see that many times in the novel.
George and Lennie go out with Slim and the other ranch hands to a local bar in the novel "Of Mice and Men."
A single social class!
Yes, Lennie Does!(:He Really Does
george kills Lennie
At the end of the novel "Of Mice and Men," Slim comforts George after George has to make the difficult decision to shoot Lennie. He shows compassion and understanding towards George's pain, acknowledging the tough choice he had to make. Slim's actions highlight his empathy and understanding of the situation.
Lennie Small's real name in the novel "Of Mice and Men" is simply Lennie Small. He is a mentally disabled migrant worker who relies on his friend George to look after him.
In "Of Mice and Men," Lennie Small is taken advantage of by both George and others. One instance is when George tells Slim how he used Lennie's strength to get them work. This can be found in Chapter 3 of the novel. Additionally, Curley's wife manipulates Lennie's naive nature to confide in her, leading to the tragic end of the story in Chapter 5.
In the novel Of Mice and Men, George and Lennie are traveling through what is described as a wooded area with a riverbed in a town in rural California in the first chapter. The novel was written by John Steinbeck and published in 1937.
No, Lennie did not get kicked in the head by a horse in "Of Mice and Men." Lennie accidentally killed a puppy and Curley's wife in the novel.