Candy is an old cripple that most of the ranchers show prejudiced against for being old. Consequently, he himself can't be dishonest and lie about his age 'I ain't got the poop any more'. Secondly Steinbeck also shows ageism through the progression of the novel by Candy having a friend at the beginning and, as the story gets on, he loses his friend to Carlson.
Ageism is shown in the book "Of Mice and Men" through the treatment of Candy, an old swamper with one hand. Despite his experience and attachment to the ranch, he is marginalized and treated as irrelevant due to his age and physical limitations. His fate reflects the harsh reality that older individuals were frequently devalued and discarded in the Great Depression era.
The dog is not killed in the book Of Mice and Men. It is taken away to be shot by Carlson, but the actual shooting is not depicted in the novel.
The word "pantomime" appears on page 57 in the book Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck.
Curley
Great
No Warner Brothers did not make a cartoon for Of Mice and Men.
His Aunt Clara
Out of his pants ;)
katinka
Of Mice and Men
John Steinbeck, the author, wrote Of Mice and Men as a short story, not a book. It is a parable.
No, "Of Mice and Men" by John Steinbeck does not have a sequel. The story ends with a tragic event and does not continue in a second book.
Because he is a mice himself and does not understand what he is reading so