Le Blanc’s essays do one thing that is essential not just to understanding (or re-understanding) Lenin, but to understanding the key behind socialism — they are dialectical. They look closely at Leninist historians, Lenin’s personhood, his relationships and accounts of his personality, but they do so to show those who had good insight, and those who didn’t, and that those people could have both good and bad insight into one of the most important revolutionary figures in history. Lenin, written off, misunderstood, and overstated in those sectarian views of history, was thoughtful, strong-headed, exacting, but never a monster. He lived through a monstrous period in history (if briefly triumphant). Though Stalin made a monstrosity of the Bolshevik party and of Leninism, Lenin himself is a figure that deserves to be studied as closely as possible and to glean from him, his writings, and his experience as much as possible on the new road to any socialist future. As Lenin said, and Le Blanc emphasizes, Lenin loved Marxism like no other. Don’t let the bourgeois history books paint Lenin a monster, burn his memory to ashes, and sweep him righteously into the dustbin. Give the guy a chance!