Has any1 read Mice and Men who is willing to answer a lot of questions
me
1. a) How would you characterize the relationship between Slim and George? b) What secret does George tell Slim? 2. In what way is Lennie like a kid rather than an adult? Provide an example. 3. a) Who is Crooks? b) How does he get his name? 4. a) Who shoots Candy’s dog? b) Besides a gun, what did Slim take with him? Why? 5. There is symbolism in Candy’s dog being shot. Tell how this incident is symbolic of Candy’s own life on the ranch. 6. State what the atmosphere is like in the bunk house just before the gun shot rang out in the air. 7. How much money has Candy saved? 9. a) How did Curley hurt his hand? b) What story did he promise to tell about his injury? 10. Explain the scene where Lennie and Curley fought. Tell what or who started the fight, what happened, who stopped it, etc. 11. Why did Curley a free to lie about the fight and the injury?
are any of these multiple choice?
no :(
sorry plz help
its ok
what type of relationship does slim and george have?
IDK Im screwed if it wasn't for you because this is due tomato and I can't read the book so TYSM :)
ok so look up 6-11 and i will look up 1-5 normally i wouldnt do this but science the short time span and remember next time try and do it before hand
TYSm Ok for chapter 2 or 3
for one i found this article
I think that Slim serves as a priest- like character for George. The manner in which Steinbeck describes Slim is laudatory, something that allows the reader to see Slim the same way that George sees him. Consider these excerpts from Chapter 2, when Slim first enters the narrative: a majesty only achieved by royalty and master craftsmen...killing a fly on the wheeler’s butt with a bull whip without touching the mule... [According to Candy] 'Slim don’t need to wear no high-heeled boots on a grain team'... gravity in his manner and a quiet so profound that all talk stopped when he spoke....His ear heard more than was said to him, and his slow speech had overtones not of thought, but of understanding beyond thought...prince of the ranch... whose authority was so great that his word was taken on any subject. If this is how the reader sees him, then, by definition, it is also how George sees him. George recognizes that Slim could help out both he and Lennie. In a setting where it has only been the two of them for so long, George sees a hopeful alliance in Slim. It is here where the friendship forms between both men. George, who has always done the thinking for both he and Lennie, finally recognizes someone who can provide much needed guidance in a setting where friends are few and adversarial threats are abundant. In the third chapter, we see this need for guidance develop more when George openly "confesses" to Slim what happened in Weed and the exact nature of the relationship between both he and Lennie. Steinbeck uses the idea of a "confessional" in quite a deliberate manner in this chapter because it helps to better understand the relationship between Slim and George. It only makes sense that when George needs some level of comfort at the end of the novel it comes from Slim reminding him that he "had to do it." In the end, it is the friendship between George and Slim that provides a fleeting moment of relief or guidance in an emotional world where nothing seems certain.
Can u write it in a form because again I don't have enough time my bed times in 17 min
mine 2 we gotta hurry
so for 1 a i can go My opinion is that slim is a priest figure for George. He and Lennie have been alone for so long and then slim comes and George has another person to 'talk to'.
sorry i couldnt help more but any other questions i can help with
Join our real-time social learning platform and learn together with your friends!