Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck

Of Mice and Men

John Steinbeck

John Steinbeck writes of such a trip in Of Mice and Men: the desperate longing of men for some kind of home-roots that they can believe in, land that they can care for-and the painful search for self. This beautiful, timeless novel speaks of the love that men can feel for each other-one inarticulate, dumb, sometimes violent in his need; the other clever, hopeful, and tied to a responsibility he doesn't want.

Reviews (7110)

Sort: Usefulness | Date

Quote-leftImagine having to read the same book, four times a day, for three years. Yep, that's my life. What do you want to know about Lennie?Quote-right

Quote-leftBeautiful NovelQuote-right

Quote-leftAfter reading it back in High School most of the people I know as well as myself quote this book or refer to it often.Quote-right

Quote-leftAt times heart-breaking. My favorite Steinbeck.Quote-right

Quote-leftI started reading this book in H.S to get over cause it was such a short book. It is the beginning of my turning into an avaricious readerQuote-right

Quote-leftSimple but thought provoking...Quote-right

Quote-left-Quote-right

Quote-leftFabulously classic.Quote-right

Quote-leftIt's short. This is a selling point when the book report is due tomorrow. Aside from that, this is a pretty lame book.Quote-right

Quote-leftI'd call it rather a novel - sharp, short, cruel and very realistic. People, friendship, money, future and who belongs to it more: money or friends, if there is choice to be made. one of the book which had an impact of me. MaryanaQuote-right

Page: 1 2 3 710 711

Image Gallery (30)