The best essays are 'What happened to feminism?" which traces mainstream (white, middle-class) feminism's increasingly reactionary politics since the 1970s, and 'Women and Islam' which explores the racist imperialist motivations behind France's banning of the veil, and explores the historical oppression of women in Islam and Christianity. This would be a good introductory text. I think some of her arguments are too simplistic. For example, I don't agree with her characterization of McKinnon as a virulent anti-Marxist, since her analysis of patriarchy is clearly informed by Marxist discourse on alienation, reification, and the division of labour. I don't agree with Smith's assessment of socialist-feminism as a failed endeavor--isn't she herself evidence of its continuation? In 'Women and Socialism', I think Smith relies too heavily on quoting the same old passages from the Communist Manifesto and Engel's Origin of the Family to prove that Marxism has women's liberation at heart. I feel she could have better proved her point by discussing the many theorists and activists who have incorporated Marxism into their work for feminist purposes, for example Himani Bannerji, bell hooks, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Dorothy Smith etc. It seems like she's trying too hard to appeal to some kind of orthodox authority, when obvious Marxism as a discourse has expanded far beyond the writing of Marx and Engels. But she does make a compelling case for the Russian revolution's attempts at women's liberation, balanced by the acknowledgment of difficult circumstances (civil war, dispersed and impoverished rural population, entrenched beliefs and habits), and the way Stalinist bureaucracy eroded most emancipatory gains such as government paid childcare, access to divorce and abortion, and socialised domestic work. So Lenin good, Stalin bad.