I wish I had the opportunity of reading this gem 40 years ago, but it's never too late.
The author takes to a road trip on how our hero evolved through times, publications and struggles to reach the scientific heights of "Capital".
Mandel shows how Marx moves "from criticism of religion to criticism of philosophy; from criticism of philosophy to criticism of the state: from criticism of the state to criticism of society -that is, from criticism of politics to criticism political economy, which led to criticism of private property."
Thus, under the influence of Engels in Manchester, and after visiting that blue City, Marx departs from Hegel's idealism and Feuerbach's humanism to commence the long and tortuous construction of his scientific approach to the Capitalist mode of production. He left in his wake several important opuses that, certainly, were works in progress, among others: the Manuscripts of 1844, the Holy Family, the German Ideology, the Poverty of Philosophy, Wage Labour and Capital, the Communist Manifesto and the Grundrisse. All of them were shaping the theories of wages, money, surplus value and the decoding of Capitalism as a mode of production, and in its rotten entrails, the alienation of labour as an historic phenomenon. Mandel guides us through them in each chapter of the book, though justifiably he spends a bit more on the Grundrisse and the Asiatic mode of production; as well as on the alienation of labour and Marx's possibility of transcending it by transforming the society structure while eliminating commodity production.
Indispensable read; utterly recommendable mostly to our new comrades in formative schools; and for the older ones to enlighten and fine tune what we've known through all this years.