Explanation:
Crooks’s room being set apart from the others in literature serves a significant purpose in exploring the themes of segregation, racism, and social isolation within society. These themes emerge strongly in John Steinbeck’s novel, Of Mice and Men, and are represented and reinforced through the physically distant location and decaying condition of Crooks’s quarters. Crooks, the stable hand, is an African American man who resides in the barn of the ranch where the novel is set. His room is isolated from the others, located at the far end of the barn, and separated from the rest of the quarters by a distance that seems almost calculated to emphasize his marginalization from the rest of the workers’ population on the ranch.