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Of Mice & Men

 

Of Mice & Men


Of Mice and Men is a novella by John Steinbeck written in 1937 which tells the tragic story of George and Lennie, two displaced Anglo migrant farm workers during the Great Depression. Lennie is a large strong man with the mind of a child, and George is a small man with a quick wit who cares for him. The title of the story refers to a line in "To a Mouse" by the Scottish poet Robert Burns--a reference to plans gone awry. George and Lennie hope to save up enough money to buy a small farm of their own (Lennie is obsessed with the prospect of caring for rabbits), but this goal always remains out of reach. Other characters' misunderstanding of Lennie's mental handicap, and Lennie's lack of control of his own great strength, lead to tragedy.

Steinbeck originally intended the story to be a play, and it has been produced as one. In many ways, the story is structured as a play, with several long scenes, stage direction-like descriptions, and large amounts of dialogue.

Steinbeck wrote this book, along with The Grapes of Wrath, in what is now Monte Sereno, California, in the home at 16250 Greenwood Lane.

The novel was banned from various American school libraries or curricula in 1993 and 1994 for "profane language, moral statement, treatment of the retarded, and the "violent ending". Nevertheless, it now appears as one of the possible books that can be studied for GCSE English in Britain and the Leaving Certificate in Ireland.

Films


The novel was made into three films:
:The 1939 film, Of Mice and Men (1939), directed by Lewis Milestone
:The 1981 TV movie, Of Mice and Men (1981), Randy Quaid (Lenny), Robert Blake (George), Ted Neeley (Curley), directed by Reza Badiyi
:The 1992 film, Of Mice and Men (1992), John Malkovich (Lennie) actor/director Gary Sinise (George)

Opera

Carlisle Floyd wrote an opera based on this novel in 1970.

ISBN numbers

  • ISBN 0822208385 (perfect, 1950)
  • ISBN 0812034317 (paperback, 1984)
  • ISBN 1556516770 (paperback, 1988)
  • ISBN 0606002006 (prebound, 1992)
  • ISBN 0453007902 (hardcover, 1992)
  • ISBN 0140177396 (hardcover and paperback, 1993)
  • ISBN 0140186425 (hardcover, 1994)
  • ISBN 0783813589 (library binding, 1995, Large Type Edition)
  • ISBN 0140188290 (paperback, 1997)
  • ISBN 0764108204 (paperback, 1999)
  • ISBN 0142000671 (paperback, 2002)


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