Holding on to a Dream That Was Never Meant to Last
4 stars
There are books that impress me with their complexity, and there are books that reach me through quiet honesty. Of Mice and Men belongs firmly to the second kind. Often associated with modernism, the novella strips away unnecessary ornament and focuses on ordinary lives shaped by hardship, loneliness, and fragile hope. From the opening pages, I felt an emotional closeness to the characters that grew stronger with every chapter.
The story follows George Milton and Lennie Small, two migrant workers traveling through California during the Great Depression. They share a simple dream of owning a small piece of land where they can live independently. As I listened to George repeat that dream to Lennie, I found myself believing in it alongside them. It is modest, almost ordinary, yet it represents freedom, dignity, and companionship in a world that offers very little security.
Lennie affected me more deeply than …
There are books that impress me with their complexity, and there are books that reach me through quiet honesty. Of Mice and Men belongs firmly to the second kind. Often associated with modernism, the novella strips away unnecessary ornament and focuses on ordinary lives shaped by hardship, loneliness, and fragile hope. From the opening pages, I felt an emotional closeness to the characters that grew stronger with every chapter.
The story follows George Milton and Lennie Small, two migrant workers traveling through California during the Great Depression. They share a simple dream of owning a small piece of land where they can live independently. As I listened to George repeat that dream to Lennie, I found myself believing in it alongside them. It is modest, almost ordinary, yet it represents freedom, dignity, and companionship in a world that offers very little security.
Lennie affected me more deeply than I expected. His immense physical strength contrasts with his childlike innocence, creating moments that are both tender and heartbreaking. I often felt protective of him, even while recognizing that his inability to understand the consequences of his actions placed everyone around him in danger. George's loyalty, patience, and growing despair gave the novel much of its emotional power.
Steinbeck also paints a moving portrait of isolation. Characters such as Candy, Crooks, and Curley's wife each carry their own unfulfilled hopes. Their conversations made me realize that loneliness can exist even in places filled with people. Every dream in the novel seems to shine briefly before reality slowly dims it.
The prose is direct and restrained, yet every scene carries emotional weight. I admired how Steinbeck trusted simple dialogue and vivid settings to communicate feelings that many novels would explain at greater length. Nothing felt exaggerated. That simplicity made the tragedy even more painful.
Closing the book, I sat quietly for a while. Of Mice and Men reminded me that compassion often survives in difficult circumstances, even when happiness does not. Steinbeck left me with a lasting sense of tenderness and sorrow, showing that the value of a dream is not measured only by whether it comes true, but by the hope it gives while it is still alive.