Part of the excellent Haymarket publishing program (which features the equally excellent HM series), this is an uneven collection of Gramsci's pre-prison letters. They range from the rather minor letters from his youth, when he lived in crushing poverty and tended to beg his father for money, to his rather romantic and melodramatic later letters to his wife. In between are letters which give a glimpse of his life in Russia in the early 20s, and the later essential letters to his collaborators as he re-oriented the PCd'I away from Bordiga's fatalistic line. Entire sections of his life are missing, especially the period of the Factory Council movement in Turin. This book probably suffers in comparison with Gramsci's prison letters, which are much more unified in style and subject, but they give us an important glimpse into the mind of probably the most creative Western Marxist. The introduction is also extremely good, and important to orient the reader. It's a book that will appeal more to Gramsci scholars more than the general reader, but it takes an important place in the burgeoning rediscovery of him.