In the barn on his own in the harness room, due to prejudice against him because he is black.
he is a black stable buck in the 1930's in the book Of Mice and Men
Crooks. and everyone IS racist in the book. Read it.
Crooks was born in California. He reveals this information during a conversation with Lennie in John Steinbeck's "Of Mice and Men."
In John Steinbeck's novel "Of Mice and Men," the character Crooks is only referred to by his nickname. His full name is not revealed in the book.
Crooks is the stable buck. Normally he is referred to as 'the n****r' because at the time racism and slavery was still an issue in America.
Crooks talks to Lennie in Chapter 4 of "Of Mice and Men," which is likely to be around pages 60-70 depending on the edition of the book. Their conversation highlights themes of loneliness and discrimination.
black stable-hand
of mice and men
Angrily.
And he has books; a tattered dictionary and a mauled copy of the California civil code for 1905.
The term "cesspool" in the book "Of Mice and Men" refers to Crooks' living quarters, which are located in the stable and are described as dark, cramped, and unclean. Crooks, the African American stable hand, is segregated from the other workers on the ranch and faces discrimination and loneliness due to his race.
In the book "Of Mice and Men," Crooks is the stable buck who has a crooked back. The boss takes his anger out on Crooks and abuses him whenever he is mad.he uses him as a venting machine