I myself do not really view “What is to be Done?” as a great beginner work for Marxists, since it mentions a lot of obscure philosophers or groups that a modern audience (with their cursory knowledge of Russian history being from the lips of liberals, or worse, conservatives) would hardly know the context of, and I am reading a version that has notes on these people!

That is not to say that it is not an influential or essential work of Lenin (I think it might be up there with “Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism” and “The State and Revolution” in terms of either factor), but one has to be willing to trudge through Russian names that you will likely never hear again.

    • LeninZedong@lemmygrad.mlOP
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      7 days ago

      I am not sure how many people would denounce his achievements related to the 1917 Revolution (the main criticisms are expect come after he starts being that weirdo anti-Stalin guy that anti-communists use).