Good book in general. Tries to cover a lot of ground for less than 200 pages - MeToo, BLM, history of social reproduction theory, queer theory, intersectionality, philosophical theories on oppression, and more.
She’s good on a lot of things, notably on being consistent anti-imperialist as regards Russia and China. She seems herself in the Marxist Humanist tradition - not a tradition that i'm particularly familiar with. Her emphasis is on being universalist and she's critical of parts of the left who digress from this, particular where it ends up covering for their support for authoritarian regimes or groups. She is also good on being serious about people reading deeply and that this is less of a thing now, including on the left.
For a book about socialist feminism there was nothing about the labour movement. This is unfortunate considering big strikes that have been fought in education and healthcare and other industries where women have been at the forefront and also with movements like Starbucks United whose activists are predominantly young, queer, and women.
Some bits went a bit over my head and I would need to go back, particularly the last chapter that discusses a lot of Hegel - to this day i still dont understand dialectics. However, the bit at the end of that chapter where she argues that Audre Lorde and Hegel are getting at similar things as regards oppression, has made me more interested in reading both writers.