Character Analysis Of George And Lennie In John Steinbeck's Of Mice And Men

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George and Lennie, two friends who are drifters, are looking for a job in a ranch in California because they are running away to other ranch because Lennie had a problem with a woman.
Lennie is a mentally deficient boy, subordinated to his friend George. He is always catching mice and killing them because he doesn’t control his own strength. He has difficulties to memorize things.
One day, they are in the wood resting for the next morning, when they’ll go to the ranch where they will start working. George tells Lennie to memorize that place as the place where he should go if he gets into trouble.
Both of them have the dream of having they own farm with animals, and having a better life.
That morning, when they arrive to the ranch, they met the boss and Curley, the boss’ son, who are the owners. And also to the rest of the workers. They will love with them in the ranch and share their daily lives, excepting one of them who is excluded to be a black man.
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One day when she was having a calm conversation with Lennie, about her lovely hair, Lennie starts touching it and couldn’t stop, so he finally kills her as he could control neither his feelings nor his strength.
At the moment that he remembers the place that George had told him, he escapes to there, and when the workers realize of such a horrible happening, they started to look for him in order to kill him.
George finds Lennie before, and kills him to protect himself and to continue his life in the ranch and not to be killed by the