Want this question answered?
Crooks lives in the harness room in the barn on the ranch. It is separate from the other workers' quarters, and he is isolated there because of his race.
Crooks lives in isolation, due to his race, in a segregated bunkhouse away from the other ranch hands. He faces discrimination and racism that the other ranch hands do not experience. This causes him to be more guarded and lonely compared to the camaraderie and social interactions among the other workers.
Crooks lives separately from the other workers on the ranch because he is the only black man there, facing racial discrimination and isolation. Being marginalized due to his race, he is forced to stay in the segregated living quarters away from the white workers.
Work livestock that live on a ranch.
I would love to live in a ranch that has horses.
spahn ranch and barker ranch
Crooks is segregated from the men in the bunkhouse because he is the only black man on the ranch and faces racial discrimination and isolation as a result. He has his own separate room in the barn and is not allowed to socialize with the other ranch workers.
No, Candy would not have agreed to let crooks live on the farm. Candy is loyal to George and Lennie, and he follows their decisions. He wouldn't jeopardize their safety or wellbeing by allowing strangers to live on the farm.
probably not because they live in the wild
what animals live on ranches
Crooks is an African American man who back then are treated like they are nothing. He couldn't live in the bunk house with the others because he's black and he wasn't allowed to play cards with others because the others assumed he suck at playing before letting him play. Again, just because he's black.
"Ranch with a bunch of guys ain't no place for a girl." "They'll can me pretty soon... I won't have no place to go." "A guy on a ranch don't never listen nor he don't ask no questions" chap 2.