Crooks is a farm worker on the ranch. He is the one who takes care of the horses. He is abused by the other farm workers just because of his skin color. His back is crooked because he was once kicked by a horse.
Crooks describes his past as one filled with discrimination and isolation due to his race. He talks about how he has endured a lifetime of being treated unfairly because of his skin color, which has made him bitter and mistrustful of others. He is resentful of the discrimination he faces and expresses a sense of helplessness about his future prospects.
His whole attitude towards everyone in the book (including himself in some cases) is negative. This shows his trials he went through being a black man at the turn of the century. (Don't forget, this is when racist nationalist powers like the K.K.K. were at their height.) He was abused as a stable buck and forced to essentially be a "paid slave" (a common practice back then.) But on the other hand, even this does not give him right to be cruel to lennie, a mentally disabled character who walks into Crooks hut and just tries to cheer him up. Crooks then lashes out all of his anger at him, and not who he should be yelling at. Lennie feels threatened by this and runs away from him, not understanding what had happened.
Crooks, the stable hand, occupies the bunkhouse in "Of Mice and Men." He is segregated from the other ranch workers due to his race and is also disabled due to a past injury.
Crooks in "Of Mice and Men" is characterized as lonely, defensive, and marginalized due to his race. He is also shown to be intelligent and perceptive, using his isolation to protect himself from the harsh realities of the world around him.
Crooks was born in California. He reveals this information during a conversation with Lennie in John Steinbeck's "Of Mice and Men."
Angrily.
black stable-hand
of mice and men
The name of the black farmhand in "Of Mice and Men" is Crooks. He is segregated from the other workers on the ranch and faces discrimination due to his race.
Crooks did not have any brothers in "Of Mice and Men." He is the only African-American worker on the ranch and faces segregation and isolation from the other workers.
In "Of Mice and Men" by John Steinbeck, the term "temple dancer" is used by Crooks to describe a woman he knew in the past who performed dances in a temple in Paris. This reference highlights the limited opportunities and experiences available to Crooks as a Black man in a segregated society, as well as the loneliness and longing for connection that he feels on the ranch.
In John Steinbeck's novella "Of Mice and Men," Crooks is only known by his last name. His full name is not provided in the text.
The black man in "Of Mice and Men" is named Crooks. He is the stable hand on the ranch where the story takes place. Crooks faces discrimination and isolation due to his race.
There are two film versions of the novel "Of Mice and Men" one made in 1992 and in 1939, Crooks is played by Joe Morton (1992) and by Leigh Whipper (1939).