Of Mice And Men Candy's Loneliness

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During the worst time period of America, Crooks, Curley’s wife, and Candy all cope with their extreme loneliness, which creates a need for control.

Candy needs
As Candy’s dog is about to be shot, Candy looks for a new partnership with George and Lennie, he carries,“You know where's a place like that?(59)." Candy, who has no family, very few connections with the ranch workers, and a huge disability, looked to his dog to solve his extreme loneliness. When everything that he has is taken away from him, he is lost, so he immediately looks for a companionship with Lennie and George in order to cope with his loneliness. He is desperately alone and always needs to be attached to something, which makes him so eager to jump into Lennie and George’s dream. Steinbeck expresses Candy’s loneliness through situational irony, and it shows how badly Candy needs a companionship, at all times.
“Candy's face had grown redder and redder, but before she was done speaking, he had control of himself. He was the master of the situation. "I might of knew," he said gently. "Maybe you just better go along an' roll your hoop. We ain't got nothing to say to you at all. We know what we got, and we don't care whether you know it or not." 79 The loneliness in candy motivates him to step in and protect …show more content…

‘“She had full, rouged lips and wide-spaced eyes, heavily made up. Her fingernails were red. her hair hung in little rolled clusters, like sausages. She wore a cotton house dress and red mules, on the insteps of which were little bouquets of red ostrich feathers. 'I'm lookin' for Curley,' she said. her voice had a nasal, brittle quality.”’ Curley’s wife shows her need for attention by wearing eye-catching clothing around the ranch, not for Curley, but for the guys. Even her hair hung in little rolled clusters, like sausages. She is insecure and acts like she isn’t lonely by dressing like a

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