Curley's wife is also illustrated, through description, as insecure: "heavily made up" (page 53) as if she is hiding behind her make up and using it as a mask. The glamorous and expensive clothes that she wears is another way of trying to make herself look captivating and to make herself seem more wealthy: "She wore a cotton house dress and red mules, on the insteps of which were little bouquets of red ostrich feathers."(page 53), contrasting with one of the themes in the novel: poverty and the financial crisis during the 1930's in America. The use of the colour red links back to the girl in Weed that Lennie supposedly molested, this is a use of foreshadowing the event that will occur between Lennie and Curley's Wife.
Steinbeck portrays Curley's wife as lonely, through dialogue: "Think I don't like to talk to somebody ever' once in a while?"(page 110), "I get lonely"(page 122), "I get awful lonely" (page 122). The repetition throughout chapter 5 of Curley's wife's loneliness emphasises her isolation and frustration at her not being able to speak to "nobody but Curley" (page 123). This links to the sub-theme of feminism in the novel. Curley's wife is not allowed to talk to anyone but Curley and in the opinion of Carlson, one of the ranch workers, she belongs in the house: "Why'n't you tell her to stay the hell home where she belongs?" (page 90).
Curley's wife has many different relationships with people in the novel. Steinbeck conveys the impression that her