Of Mice and Men

why is crroks initally hostile to lennie then relents? crooks feeling about his treatment, why he tells lenie so much. reasons why he taunts lennue, how he feels about his life, his early life, his opinion about the dream farm

of mice and men

Asked by
Last updated by Aslan
Answers 2
Add Yours

Crooks is hostile against everyone because he feels they're hostile and prejudice against him. He opens up to Lennie because Lennie is harmless and he taunts him for the same reason.

Steinbeck explores what it might be like to be isolated, lonely and marginalized. Crooks feels frustrated and alone. His only space is the hovel beside the stables. Lennie, unknowingly, intrudes on his space. Crooks is segregated from the other men so his space is the one shred of pride he has left. Really Crooks desperately wants to talk with somebody, anybody. This is why he pours his heart out to Lennie. Lennie is mentally challenged. This puts Crooks, for a moment, in control. Crooks controls nothing so his taunts to Lennie are simply an effort to control something, anything. The scene is very sad, it is the expression of a soul in pain.