I think she lets him stroke her hair because he said he liked to stroked things a lot and because she is lonely
Lennie reacts out of fear and clumsiness when Curley's wife allows him to stroke her hair. Curley's wife reacts flirtatiously and engages with Lennie momentarily before realizing he can be dangerous.
Lennie wouldn't stop and he was tightening his grip on her hair. She knew what Lennie had done to Curley.
Curley's wife invites Lennie to feel how soft her hair is. She tries to engage him in conversation and enjoys the attention she receives from him. However, this interaction ultimately leads to a tragic outcome.
because Lennie is in the barn petting the dead pup when curleys wife walks in and starts talking to him. she offers Lennie to feel how soft her hair isand when Lennie is feeling the hair , she starts getting upset and starts screaming, Lennie tries to tell her to stop and she wouldn't so he shook her and when he stoppped she was limp.
Curley's wife yells at Lennie for ruining her chance of being in the movies and for making her lonely on the ranch. She accuses him of being responsible for her unhappiness and complains about her life and her marriage to Curley.
Curley's wife unintentionally provokes Lennie by letting him stroke her hair too roughly, leading him to accidentally kill her in a moment of panic.
Lennie is facinated because he finds her pretty, but frightened because George and Candy said that she is trouble because she is curleys wife.soory if my answer is a little middle school like =p
because shes a tart
George plans to make it seem like Curley's wife's death was an accident by staging it as if she was killed trying to reach for Lennie's hair when he was defending himself. By framing it in a way that Lennie was protecting himself, George hopes to avoid any blame or suspicion falling on Lennie or himself.
In Chapter Five of "Of Mice and Men," Lennie accidentally kills Curley's wife in the barn when she lets him stroke her hair, leading to tragic consequences.
Curley's wife asked Lennie to stroke her hair because she was lonely and seeking attention. She enjoyed the feeling of someone paying her special attention, even though it was inappropriate due to her marriage with Curley.
The two are in a ranch near Soledad, California, for most of the book, but it is only at the end of the book that Lennie kills Curley's wife while trying to stroke her hair.