AN EXCELLENT, CRITICAL, YET SYMPATHETIC PORTRAIT
Saul Kussiel Padover (1905-1981) was a historian and political scientist at the New School for Social Research in New York City; he wrote other books such as 'Jefferson,' etc. The book was published in 1978, then in abridgement in 1980.
He explained in the "Author's Note": "In this book, which has been twelve years in the making, I have aimed at something not available in other biographies of Marx: an objective account of him as a human being---lover, husband, friend, fighter, father, foe---rather than as the philosophic symbol and revolutionary idol that he has become." (Pg. xvi)
He suggests, "The most important book that Marx read, and one that was clearly a turning point in his own intellectual development from idealism to materialism, was Ludwig Feuerbach's The Essence of Christianity... [Feuerbach asserted] Religion existed only in man's mind; it was man's 'consciousness of the infinite.'... Feuerbach's book had a stunning effect on Marx, as it did on Engels, who read it at about the same time... he wrote, 'there is no other road to TRUTH and FREEDOM except the one that leads through the Feuerbach.'" (Pg. 63-64)
Although of Jewish ancestry (though raised by nonobservant parents), Padover records that Marx said a number of rather uncomplimentary things about the Jewish people (Pg. 83-84, 183); as indeed, he also said about persons of African ancestry (e.g., Pg. 286-287).
Padover notes, "Marx seemed incapable of handling the ideas of an adversary solely on their merits; he had to annihilate his opponent altogether." (Pg. 121) The Communist Manifesto "Introduced a new and baneful note into the revolutionary movement---the idea of conflict and hate. Up to that time, socialists had tended to be humanists and utopians, emphasizing the brotherhood of man, rather than the solidarity of class... Marx stressed struggle, violence, and class." (Pg. 129)
He recounts the Marx family's poverty: "Jenny [Marx's wife] was particularly affected by their poverty. As her pride was ground down, her health and nerves were affected. Indigence also took its toll on the children and resulted, Jenny was convinced, in the death of at least three of them..." (Pg. 159) He also records the birth of Marx's illegitimate child with their housekeeper: "Jenny... did not know that her husband was the father of [the] baby. As the result of an understanding reached between Marx and Engels, Jenny and the rest of the family assumed that Engels, a bachelor, was the father, and the secret was preserved, apparently intact, to the end of Jenny's life." (Pg. 160)
Padover argues, "Marx speaks both to the heart and the mind, invoking hopes alleged to be based on 'science.' That Marx's communism and his economics are not, as he fondly believed, 'scientific' in any meaningful sense of the word, has little relevance in terms of communicating ideas. Marx's economic writings... are the Scriptures for those who aspire to transform the world." (Pg. 220-221)
This is an excellent biography of Marx, for anyone who is wanting an honest yet sympathetic portrait of the man.