The novel “Of Mice and Men” is about the lives of farm workers during the Great Depression in 1930s. Crooks is one of the main characters in the novel “Of Mice and Men”. He is a crippled man who’s picked on because he’s black. However he’s very bitter about life.
Crooks’ character is explored through the description of his bunkhouse by many ways.
The first sentence of the description of Crooks’ bunkhouse suggest he is presented in the manner of an animal, symbolizing society’s relegation of him to the margins because he’s black. “Crooks, the negro stable buck had his bunk in the harness room; a little shed that leaned off the wall of the barn.” His bunk is next to the barn and horses, signifying him being considered equal not to man, but to animals alone. Crooks' living in a “little shed” highlights the lack of his own space and the little power he has. …show more content…
He is an intelligent person. “And he had books, too; a tattered dictionary and a mauled copy of the California civil code for 1905.” This is the first sign that he’ll be a fully developed character with a personality and a background. The fact that Crooks has a copy of the California civil code for 1905 suggests he is concerned about his rights. We can surmise that Crooks strives to be literate on his own. Crooks clearly values this book, as it is “mauled”, suggesting that he has read it often, showing that he clings to the proof of worth and protection that it supposedly